contrib/builddeb
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Thu, 03 Dec 2015 21:37:01 -0800
changeset 27220 4374d819ccd5
parent 27212 ef9301ce6046
child 28988 4f1dac94b53f
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
mercurial: implement import hook for handling C/Python modules There are a handful of modules that have both pure Python and C extension implementations. Currently, setup.py copies files from mercurial/pure/*.py to mercurial/ during the install process if C extensions are not available. This way, "import mercurial.X" will work whether C extensions are available or not. This approach has a few drawbacks. First, there aren't run-time checks verifying the C extensions are loaded when they should be. This could lead to accidental use of the slower pure Python modules. Second, the C extensions aren't compatible with PyPy and running Mercurial with PyPy requires installing Mercurial - you can't run ./hg from a source checkout. This makes developing while running PyPy somewhat difficult. This patch implements a PEP-302 import hook for finding and loading the modules with both C and Python implementations. When a module with dual implementations is requested for import, its import is handled by our import hook. The importer has a mechanism that controls what types of modules we allow to load. We call this loading behavior the "module load policy." There are 3 settings: * Only load C extensions * Only load pure Python * Try to load C and fall back to Python An environment variable allows overriding this policy at run time. This is mainly useful for developers and for performing actions against the source checkout (such as installing), which require overriding the default (strict) policy about requiring C extensions. The default mode for now is to allow both. This isn't proper and is technically backwards incompatible. However, it is necessary to implement a sane patch series that doesn't break the world during future bisections. The behavior will be corrected in future patch. We choose the main mercurial/__init__.py module for this code out of necessity: in a future world, if the custom module importer isn't registered, we'll fail to find/import certain modules when running from a pure installation. Without the magical import-time side-effects, *any* importer of mercurial.* modules would be required to call a function to register our importer. I'm not a fan of import time side effects and I initially attempted to do this. However, I was foiled by our own test harness, which has numerous `python` invoked scripts that "import mercurial" and fail because the importer isn't registered. Realizing this problem is probably present in random Python scripts that have been written over the years, I decided that sacrificing purity for backwards compatibility is necessary. Plus, if you are programming Python, "import" should probably "just work." It's worth noting that now that we have a custom module loader, it would be possible to hook up demand module proxies at this level instead of replacing __import__. We leave this work for another time, if it's even desired. This patch breaks importing in environments where Mercurial modules are loaded from a zip file (such as py2exe distributions). This will be addressed in a subsequent patch.

#!/bin/sh -e
#
# Build a Mercurial debian package from the current repo
#
# Tested on Jessie (stable as of original script authoring.)

. $(dirname $0)/packagelib.sh

BUILD=1
CLEANUP=1
DISTID=`(lsb_release -is 2> /dev/null | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]') || echo debian`
CODENAME=`lsb_release -cs 2> /dev/null || echo unknown`
while [ "$1" ]; do
    case "$1" in
    --distid )
        shift
        DISTID="$1"
        shift
        ;;
    --codename )
        shift
        CODENAME="$1"
        shift
        ;;
    --cleanup )
        shift
        BUILD=
        ;;
    --build )
        shift
        CLEANUP=
        ;;
    * )
        echo "Invalid parameter $1!" 1>&2
        exit 1
        ;;
    esac
done

trap "if [ '$CLEANUP' ] ; then rm -r '$PWD/debian' ; fi" EXIT

set -u

if [ ! -d .hg ]; then
    echo 'You are not inside a Mercurial repository!' 1>&2
    exit 1
fi

gethgversion
debver="$version"
if [ -n "$type" ] ; then
    debver="$debver~$type"
fi
if [ -n "$distance" ] ; then
    debver="$debver+$distance-$node"
fi

control=debian/control
changelog=debian/changelog

if [ "$BUILD" ]; then
    if [ -d debian ] ; then
        echo "Error! debian control directory already exists!"
        exit 1
    fi

    cp -r $PWD/contrib/debian debian
    chmod -R 0755 debian

    # This looks like sed -i, but sed -i behaves just differently enough
    # between BSD and GNU sed that I gave up and did the dumb thing.
    sed "s/__VERSION__/$debver/" < $changelog > $changelog.tmp
    date=$(date --rfc-2822)
    sed "s/__DATE__/$date/" < $changelog.tmp > $changelog
    rm $changelog.tmp

    debuild -us -uc -b
    if [ $? != 0 ]; then
        echo 'debuild failed!'
        exit 1
    fi

fi
if [ "$CLEANUP" ] ; then
    echo
    OUTPUTDIR=${OUTPUTDIR:=packages/$DISTID-$CODENAME}
    mkdir -p "$OUTPUTDIR"
    find ../mercurial*.deb ../mercurial_*.build ../mercurial_*.changes \
          -type f -newer $control -print0 | \
      xargs -Inarf -0 mv narf "$OUTPUTDIR"
    echo "Built packages for $debver:"
    find "$OUTPUTDIR" -type f -newer $control -name '*.deb'
fi