Mercurial > hg
changeset 35981:ef683a0fd21f
wireproto: define and use types for wire protocol commands
Wire protocol commands have historically been declared as
2-tuples in wireproto.commands. There are some additional features I'd
like to implement that require going beyond 2-tuples. But because
the 2-tuple API (both destructuring assignment and direct assignment
into the dict) is used throughout the code base and in 3rd party
extensions, we can't do a trivial type change.
This commit creates a new "commandentry" type to represent declared
wire protocol commands. It implements __getitem__ and __iter__ so
it can quack like a 2-tuple. The @wireprotocommand decorator now
creates "commandentry" instances.
We also create a "commanddict" type to represent the dictionary of
declared wire protocol commands. It inherits from "dict" but provides
a custom __setitem__ to coerce passed 2-tuples to "commandentry"
instances. wireproto.commands is now an instance of this type.
Various callers in core rely on the new functionality. And tests
pass. So I'm reasonably confident things will "just work" in 3rd
party extensions as well.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1998
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 31 Jan 2018 14:05:11 -0800 |
parents | b4976912a6ef |
children | 5a56bf4180ad |
files | mercurial/wireproto.py |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 59 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/mercurial/wireproto.py Tue Jan 30 15:21:59 2018 -0800 +++ b/mercurial/wireproto.py Wed Jan 31 14:05:11 2018 -0800 @@ -634,8 +634,64 @@ return compengines -# list of commands -commands = {} +class commandentry(object): + """Represents a declared wire protocol command.""" + def __init__(self, func, args=''): + self.func = func + self.args = args + + def _merge(self, func, args): + """Merge this instance with an incoming 2-tuple. + + This is called when a caller using the old 2-tuple API attempts + to replace an instance. The incoming values are merged with + data not captured by the 2-tuple and a new instance containing + the union of the two objects is returned. + """ + return commandentry(func, args) + + # Old code treats instances as 2-tuples. So expose that interface. + def __iter__(self): + yield self.func + yield self.args + + def __getitem__(self, i): + if i == 0: + return self.func + elif i == 1: + return self.args + else: + raise IndexError('can only access elements 0 and 1') + +class commanddict(dict): + """Container for registered wire protocol commands. + + It behaves like a dict. But __setitem__ is overwritten to allow silent + coercion of values from 2-tuples for API compatibility. + """ + def __setitem__(self, k, v): + if isinstance(v, commandentry): + pass + # Cast 2-tuples to commandentry instances. + elif isinstance(v, tuple): + if len(v) != 2: + raise ValueError('command tuples must have exactly 2 elements') + + # It is common for extensions to wrap wire protocol commands via + # e.g. ``wireproto.commands[x] = (newfn, args)``. Because callers + # doing this aren't aware of the new API that uses objects to store + # command entries, we automatically merge old state with new. + if k in self: + v = self[k]._merge(v[0], v[1]) + else: + v = commandentry(v[0], v[1]) + else: + raise ValueError('command entries must be commandentry instances ' + 'or 2-tuples') + + return super(commanddict, self).__setitem__(k, v) + +commands = commanddict() def wireprotocommand(name, args=''): """Decorator to declare a wire protocol command. @@ -646,7 +702,7 @@ accepts. ``*`` is a special value that says to accept all arguments. """ def register(func): - commands[name] = (func, args) + commands[name] = commandentry(func, args) return func return register