mercurial/pure/parsers.py
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
Mon, 20 Mar 2017 21:40:28 -0700
changeset 31529 61ff3852f6ed
parent 31220 37596c980662
child 32372 df448de7cf3b
permissions -rw-r--r--
pure: use int instead of long Similar to the recent 73aa13bc8dac (revlog: use int instead of long, 2017-03-19).

# parsers.py - Python implementation of parsers.c
#
# Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# 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 struct
import zlib

from .node import nullid
from . import pycompat
stringio = pycompat.stringio


_pack = struct.pack
_unpack = struct.unpack
_compress = zlib.compress
_decompress = zlib.decompress

# Some code below makes tuples directly because it's more convenient. However,
# code outside this module should always use dirstatetuple.
def dirstatetuple(*x):
    # x is a tuple
    return x

indexformatng = ">Qiiiiii20s12x"
indexfirst = struct.calcsize('Q')
sizeint = struct.calcsize('i')
indexsize = struct.calcsize(indexformatng)

def gettype(q):
    return int(q & 0xFFFF)

def offset_type(offset, type):
    return int(int(offset) << 16 | type)

class BaseIndexObject(object):
    def __len__(self):
        return self._lgt + len(self._extra) + 1

    def insert(self, i, tup):
        assert i == -1
        self._extra.append(tup)

    def _fix_index(self, i):
        if not isinstance(i, int):
            raise TypeError("expecting int indexes")
        if i < 0:
            i = len(self) + i
        if i < 0 or i >= len(self):
            raise IndexError
        return i

    def __getitem__(self, i):
        i = self._fix_index(i)
        if i == len(self) - 1:
            return (0, 0, 0, -1, -1, -1, -1, nullid)
        if i >= self._lgt:
            return self._extra[i - self._lgt]
        index = self._calculate_index(i)
        r = struct.unpack(indexformatng, self._data[index:index + indexsize])
        if i == 0:
            e = list(r)
            type = gettype(e[0])
            e[0] = offset_type(0, type)
            return tuple(e)
        return r

class IndexObject(BaseIndexObject):
    def __init__(self, data):
        assert len(data) % indexsize == 0
        self._data = data
        self._lgt = len(data) // indexsize
        self._extra = []

    def _calculate_index(self, i):
        return i * indexsize

    def __delitem__(self, i):
        if not isinstance(i, slice) or not i.stop == -1 or not i.step is None:
            raise ValueError("deleting slices only supports a:-1 with step 1")
        i = self._fix_index(i.start)
        if i < self._lgt:
            self._data = self._data[:i * indexsize]
            self._lgt = i
            self._extra = []
        else:
            self._extra = self._extra[:i - self._lgt]

class InlinedIndexObject(BaseIndexObject):
    def __init__(self, data, inline=0):
        self._data = data
        self._lgt = self._inline_scan(None)
        self._inline_scan(self._lgt)
        self._extra = []

    def _inline_scan(self, lgt):
        off = 0
        if lgt is not None:
            self._offsets = [0] * lgt
        count = 0
        while off <= len(self._data) - indexsize:
            s, = struct.unpack('>i',
                self._data[off + indexfirst:off + sizeint + indexfirst])
            if lgt is not None:
                self._offsets[count] = off
            count += 1
            off += indexsize + s
        if off != len(self._data):
            raise ValueError("corrupted data")
        return count

    def __delitem__(self, i):
        if not isinstance(i, slice) or not i.stop == -1 or not i.step is None:
            raise ValueError("deleting slices only supports a:-1 with step 1")
        i = self._fix_index(i.start)
        if i < self._lgt:
            self._offsets = self._offsets[:i]
            self._lgt = i
            self._extra = []
        else:
            self._extra = self._extra[:i - self._lgt]

    def _calculate_index(self, i):
        return self._offsets[i]

def parse_index2(data, inline):
    if not inline:
        return IndexObject(data), None
    return InlinedIndexObject(data, inline), (0, data)

def parse_dirstate(dmap, copymap, st):
    parents = [st[:20], st[20: 40]]
    # dereference fields so they will be local in loop
    format = ">cllll"
    e_size = struct.calcsize(format)
    pos1 = 40
    l = len(st)

    # the inner loop
    while pos1 < l:
        pos2 = pos1 + e_size
        e = _unpack(">cllll", st[pos1:pos2]) # a literal here is faster
        pos1 = pos2 + e[4]
        f = st[pos2:pos1]
        if '\0' in f:
            f, c = f.split('\0')
            copymap[f] = c
        dmap[f] = e[:4]
    return parents

def pack_dirstate(dmap, copymap, pl, now):
    now = int(now)
    cs = stringio()
    write = cs.write
    write("".join(pl))
    for f, e in dmap.iteritems():
        if e[0] == 'n' and e[3] == now:
            # The file was last modified "simultaneously" with the current
            # write to dirstate (i.e. within the same second for file-
            # systems with a granularity of 1 sec). This commonly happens
            # for at least a couple of files on 'update'.
            # The user could change the file without changing its size
            # within the same second. Invalidate the file's mtime in
            # dirstate, forcing future 'status' calls to compare the
            # contents of the file if the size is the same. This prevents
            # mistakenly treating such files as clean.
            e = dirstatetuple(e[0], e[1], e[2], -1)
            dmap[f] = e

        if f in copymap:
            f = "%s\0%s" % (f, copymap[f])
        e = _pack(">cllll", e[0], e[1], e[2], e[3], len(f))
        write(e)
        write(f)
    return cs.getvalue()