status: move the boundary comparison logic within the timestamp module
Some extensions will need it too. So lets isolate the logic. It also makes
things clearer.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D11799
--- a/mercurial/context.py Tue Nov 23 18:11:42 2021 +0100
+++ b/mercurial/context.py Tue Nov 23 18:03:51 2021 +0100
@@ -1823,29 +1823,12 @@
s = self[f].lstat()
mode = s.st_mode
size = s.st_size
- file_mtime = timestamp.mtime_of(s)
- cache_info = (mode, size, file_mtime)
-
- file_second = file_mtime[0]
- boundary_second = mtime_boundary[0]
- # If the mtime of the ambiguous file is younger (or equal)
- # to the starting point of the `status` walk, we cannot
- # garantee that another, racy, write will not happen right
- # after with the same mtime and we cannot cache the
- # information.
- #
- # However is the mtime is far away in the future, this is
- # likely some mismatch between the current clock and
- # previous file system operation. So mtime more than one days
- # in the future are considered fine.
- if (
- boundary_second
- <= file_second
- < (3600 * 24 + boundary_second)
- ):
+ file_mtime = timestamp.reliable_mtime_of(s, mtime_boundary)
+ if file_mtime is not None:
+ cache_info = (mode, size, file_mtime)
+ fixup.append((f, cache_info))
+ else:
clean.append(f)
- else:
- fixup.append((f, cache_info))
except (IOError, OSError):
# A file become inaccessible in between? Mark it as deleted,
# matching dirstate behavior (issue5584).
--- a/mercurial/dirstateutils/timestamp.py Tue Nov 23 18:11:42 2021 +0100
+++ b/mercurial/dirstateutils/timestamp.py Tue Nov 23 18:03:51 2021 +0100
@@ -99,3 +99,28 @@
subsec_nanos = nanos % billion
return timestamp((secs, subsec_nanos))
+
+
+def reliable_mtime_of(stat_result, present_mtime):
+ """same as `mtime_of`, but return None if the date might be ambiguous
+
+ A modification time is reliable if it is older than "present_time" (or
+ sufficiently in the futur).
+
+ Otherwise a concurrent modification might happens with the same mtime.
+ """
+ file_mtime = mtime_of(stat_result)
+ file_second = file_mtime[0]
+ boundary_second = present_mtime[0]
+ # If the mtime of the ambiguous file is younger (or equal) to the starting
+ # point of the `status` walk, we cannot garantee that another, racy, write
+ # will not happen right after with the same mtime and we cannot cache the
+ # information.
+ #
+ # However is the mtime is far away in the future, this is likely some
+ # mismatch between the current clock and previous file system operation. So
+ # mtime more than one days in the future are considered fine.
+ if boundary_second <= file_second < (3600 * 24 + boundary_second):
+ return None
+ else:
+ return file_mtime