view hgext/fsmonitor/state.py @ 35506:fa865878a849

lfs: show a friendly message when pushing lfs to a server without lfs enabled Upfront disclaimer: I don't know anything about the wire protocol, and this was pretty much cargo-culted from largefiles, and then clonebundles, since it seems more modern. I was surprised that exchange.push() will ensure all of the proper requirements when exchanging between two local repos, but doesn't care when one is remote. All this new capability marker does is inform the client that the extension is enabled remotely. It may or may not contain commits with external blobs. Open issues: - largefiles uses 'largefiles=serve' for its capability. Someday I hope to be able to push lfs blobs to an `hg serve` instance. That will probably require a distinct capability. Should it change to '=serve' then? Or just add an 'lfs-serve' capability then? - The flip side of this is more complicated. It looks like largefiles adds an 'lheads' command for the client to signal to the server that the extension is loaded. That is then converted to 'heads' and sent through the normal wire protocol plumbing. A client using the 'heads' command directly is kicked out with a message indicating that the largefiles extension must be loaded. We could do similar with 'lfsheads', but then a repo with both largefiles and lfs blobs can't be pushed over the wire. Hopefully somebody with more wire protocol experience can think of something else. I see 'x-hgarg-1' on some commands in the tests, but not on heads, and didn't dig any further.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sat, 23 Dec 2017 17:49:12 -0500
parents 718f7acd6d5e
children 2372284d9457
line wrap: on
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# state.py - fsmonitor persistent state
#
# Copyright 2013-2016 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.

from __future__ import absolute_import

import errno
import os
import socket
import struct

from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import (
    pathutil,
    util,
)

_version = 4
_versionformat = ">I"

class state(object):
    def __init__(self, repo):
        self._vfs = repo.vfs
        self._ui = repo.ui
        self._rootdir = pathutil.normasprefix(repo.root)
        self._lastclock = None
        self._identity = util.filestat(None)

        self.mode = self._ui.config('fsmonitor', 'mode')
        self.walk_on_invalidate = self._ui.configbool(
            'fsmonitor', 'walk_on_invalidate')
        self.timeout = float(self._ui.config('fsmonitor', 'timeout'))

    def get(self):
        try:
            file = self._vfs('fsmonitor.state', 'rb')
        except IOError as inst:
            self._identity = util.filestat(None)
            if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
                raise
            return None, None, None

        self._identity = util.filestat.fromfp(file)

        versionbytes = file.read(4)
        if len(versionbytes) < 4:
            self._ui.log(
                'fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: state file only has %d bytes, '
                'nuking state\n' % len(versionbytes))
            self.invalidate()
            return None, None, None
        try:
            diskversion = struct.unpack(_versionformat, versionbytes)[0]
            if diskversion != _version:
                # different version, nuke state and start over
                self._ui.log(
                    'fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: version switch from %d to '
                    '%d, nuking state\n' % (diskversion, _version))
                self.invalidate()
                return None, None, None

            state = file.read().split('\0')
            # state = hostname\0clock\0ignorehash\0 + list of files, each
            # followed by a \0
            if len(state) < 3:
                self._ui.log(
                    'fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: state file truncated (expected '
                    '3 chunks, found %d), nuking state\n', len(state))
                self.invalidate()
                return None, None, None
            diskhostname = state[0]
            hostname = socket.gethostname()
            if diskhostname != hostname:
                # file got moved to a different host
                self._ui.log('fsmonitor', 'fsmonitor: stored hostname "%s" '
                             'different from current "%s", nuking state\n' %
                             (diskhostname, hostname))
                self.invalidate()
                return None, None, None

            clock = state[1]
            ignorehash = state[2]
            # discard the value after the last \0
            notefiles = state[3:-1]

        finally:
            file.close()

        return clock, ignorehash, notefiles

    def set(self, clock, ignorehash, notefiles):
        if clock is None:
            self.invalidate()
            return

        # Read the identity from the file on disk rather than from the open file
        # pointer below, because the latter is actually a brand new file.
        identity = util.filestat.frompath(self._vfs.join('fsmonitor.state'))
        if identity != self._identity:
            self._ui.debug('skip updating fsmonitor.state: identity mismatch\n')
            return

        try:
            file = self._vfs('fsmonitor.state', 'wb', atomictemp=True,
                checkambig=True)
        except (IOError, OSError):
            self._ui.warn(_("warning: unable to write out fsmonitor state\n"))
            return

        with file:
            file.write(struct.pack(_versionformat, _version))
            file.write(socket.gethostname() + '\0')
            file.write(clock + '\0')
            file.write(ignorehash + '\0')
            if notefiles:
                file.write('\0'.join(notefiles))
                file.write('\0')

    def invalidate(self):
        try:
            os.unlink(os.path.join(self._rootdir, '.hg', 'fsmonitor.state'))
        except OSError as inst:
            if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
                raise
        self._identity = util.filestat(None)

    def setlastclock(self, clock):
        self._lastclock = clock

    def getlastclock(self):
        return self._lastclock