Tue, 20 Aug 2024 16:32:13 -0400 shelve: raise an error when loading a corrupt state file in an impossible case
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Tue, 20 Aug 2024 16:32:13 -0400] rev 51813
shelve: raise an error when loading a corrupt state file in an impossible case The old return statement was flagged by pytype 2023.06.16 running under python 3.10.11. No idea why it isn't caught in CI running the same pytype with py3.7. This function is only called by `unshelvecmd()` (which first checks that either `--abort` or `--continue` is specified), and `hgabortunshelve()` and `hgcontinueunshelve()`, which locally apply `--abort` or `--continue` respectively. Therefore, there is no other way to call this, and this error should never be seen, but pytype can't figure that out on its own. Given that the abort case clears the state, it seems reasonable to defensively code this and not make that a blanket `else` case, on the off chance a 3rd way of calling this appears in the future.
Tue, 20 Aug 2024 11:18:10 -0400 contrib: print the version of pytype used to do the type checking
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Tue, 20 Aug 2024 11:18:10 -0400] rev 51812
contrib: print the version of pytype used to do the type checking This will help with CI. I don't see a way to print the version of python that's running it. When I tried `head -n 1 $(which pytype)`, the CI run printed: #!/usr/bin/env bash Locally, that gives the path to the python interpreter in the venv, so IDK what's different.
Sat, 17 Aug 2024 18:43:23 -0400 typing: create an @overload of `phasecache` ctor to handle the copy case
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Sat, 17 Aug 2024 18:43:23 -0400] rev 51811
typing: create an @overload of `phasecache` ctor to handle the copy case In `phasecache.copy()`, it calls `self.__class__(None, None, _load=False)`, but the constuctor is typed to take a non-None repository. For the `_load=False` case, all args are ignored (and the copy function itself populates the attrs on the new object), so this isn't an error. For the default `_load=True` case, it needs a non-None repository. This is the simplest way to handle that duality. The reason this wasn't being detected is because pytype is confused by the interface decorators on the `localrepository` class, and is inferring the whole class as `Any`. (See 3e9a660b074a or c1d7ac70980b) Therefore, the type hint of `localrepo.localrepository` here was also effectively `Any`, which disabled the type checking entirely. This is the first foray into using `typing_extensions` to unlock future typing features. I think this is safe and reasonable because 1) it is only imported in the type checking phase (so no need to vendor our own copy), and 2) pytype has its own copy of `typing_extensions` bundled with it, so no need to alter the test environment. When run with a version of python that supports the symbol(s) natively, `typing_extensions` simply re-exports from `typing`, so there shouldn't be any future headaches with this.
Sat, 17 Aug 2024 17:38:35 -0400 typing: declare the `_phasesets` member of `phasecache` to be `Optional`
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Sat, 17 Aug 2024 17:38:35 -0400] rev 51810
typing: declare the `_phasesets` member of `phasecache` to be `Optional` Something in this area got flagged while making the repository class visible to pytype (instead of being typed as `Any`). A None assignment to something not optional is wrong, and when I tried setting it to `{}` to keep it non-Optional, some tests failed. There are checks for the attr being None elsewhere, so this seems to have just been an oversight.
Fri, 16 Aug 2024 18:11:52 -0400 typing: hide the interface version of `dirstate` during type checking
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Fri, 16 Aug 2024 18:11:52 -0400] rev 51809
typing: hide the interface version of `dirstate` during type checking As noted in the previous commit, the `dirstate` type is still inferred as `Any` by pytype, including where it is used as a base class for the largefiles dirstate. That effectively disables most type checking. The problems fixed two commits ago were flagged by this change. I'm not at all clear what the benefit of the original type is, but that was what was used at runtime, so I don't want to change the largefiles base class to the raw class. Having both a lowercase and camelcase name for the same thing isn't great, but given that this trivially finds problems without worrying about which symbol clients may be using, and the non-raw type is useless to pytype anyway, I'm not going to worry about it.
Fri, 16 Aug 2024 18:02:32 -0400 dirstate: remove the interface decorator to help pytype
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Fri, 16 Aug 2024 18:02:32 -0400] rev 51808
dirstate: remove the interface decorator to help pytype This is the same change that was made for some of the manifest classes in 3e9a660b074a. Note that `dirstate` is still inferred as `Any`, but at least we have `DirState` with all of the expected attributes.
Fri, 16 Aug 2024 17:58:17 -0400 largefiles: sync up `largefilesdirstate` methods with `dirstate` base class
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Fri, 16 Aug 2024 17:58:17 -0400] rev 51807
largefiles: sync up `largefilesdirstate` methods with `dirstate` base class As it currently stands, pytype infers the `dirstate` class (and anything else decorated with `@interfaceutil.implementer`) as `Any`. When that is worked around, it suddenly noticed that most of these methods don't exist in the `dirstate` class anymore. Since they only called into the missing methods and there's no test failures, we can assume these are never called, and they can be dropped. In addition, PyCharm flagged `set_tracked()` and `_ignore()` as not overriding a superclass method with the same arguments. The missing default parameter for the former was the obvious issue. I'm guessing that the latter was named wrong because while there is `_ignore()` in the base class, it takes no arguments and returns a matcher. The `_ignorefiles()` superclass method also takes no args, and returns a list of bytes. The `_ignorefileandline()` superclass method DOES take a file, but returns a tuple. Therefore, the closest match is `_dirignore()`, which takes a file AND returns a bool. No idea why this needs to be overridden though.
Fri, 16 Aug 2024 11:12:19 +0100 sparse: reliably avoid writing to store without a lock
Arseniy Alekseyev <aalekseyev@janestreet.com> [Fri, 16 Aug 2024 11:12:19 +0100] rev 51806
sparse: reliably avoid writing to store without a lock With the code as written before this patch we can still end up writing to store in `debugsparse`. Obviously we'll write to it if by accident a store requirement is modified, but more importantly we write to it if another concurrent transaction modifies the requirements file on disk. We can't rule this out since we're not holding the store lock, so it's better to explicitly pass a permission to write instead of inferring it based on file contents.
Thu, 15 Aug 2024 13:52:14 +0100 debugsparse: stop taking the store lock
Arseniy Alekseyev <aalekseyev@janestreet.com> [Thu, 15 Aug 2024 13:52:14 +0100] rev 51805
debugsparse: stop taking the store lock debugsparse is a workspace-only opperation, or it better be workspace-only. Let's make it to stop taking the store lock.
Thu, 15 Aug 2024 14:54:22 +0100 scmutils: read the requires file before writing to avoid unnecessary rewrite
Arseniy Alekseyev <aalekseyev@janestreet.com> [Thu, 15 Aug 2024 14:54:22 +0100] rev 51804
scmutils: read the requires file before writing to avoid unnecessary rewrite This lets us get away without the repo lock in situations where we need to write requirements, but we know we're not changing the store requirements.
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