mercurial/hbisect.py
author Greg Ward <greg@gerg.ca>
Thu, 25 Aug 2011 20:21:04 -0400
changeset 15057 774da7121fc9
parent 14895 a35d6f822e3e
child 15135 f19de58af225
permissions -rw-r--r--
atomictempfile: make close() consistent with other file-like objects. The usual contract is that close() makes your writes permanent, so atomictempfile's use of close() to *discard* writes (and rename() to keep them) is rather unexpected. Thus, change it so close() makes things permanent and add a new discard() method to throw them away. discard() is only used internally, in __del__(), to ensure that writes are discarded when an atomictempfile object goes out of scope. I audited mercurial.*, hgext.*, and ~80 third-party extensions, and found no one using the existing semantics of close() to discard writes, so this should be safe.

# changelog bisection for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2007 Matt Mackall
# Copyright 2005, 2006 Benoit Boissinot <benoit.boissinot@ens-lyon.org>
#
# Inspired by git bisect, extension skeleton taken from mq.py.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

import os
from i18n import _
from node import short, hex
import util

def bisect(changelog, state):
    """find the next node (if any) for testing during a bisect search.
    returns a (nodes, number, good) tuple.

    'nodes' is the final result of the bisect if 'number' is 0.
    Otherwise 'number' indicates the remaining possible candidates for
    the search and 'nodes' contains the next bisect target.
    'good' is True if bisect is searching for a first good changeset, False
    if searching for a first bad one.
    """

    clparents = changelog.parentrevs
    skip = set([changelog.rev(n) for n in state['skip']])

    def buildancestors(bad, good):
        # only the earliest bad revision matters
        badrev = min([changelog.rev(n) for n in bad])
        goodrevs = [changelog.rev(n) for n in good]
        goodrev = min(goodrevs)
        # build visit array
        ancestors = [None] * (len(changelog) + 1) # an extra for [-1]

        # set nodes descended from goodrevs
        for rev in goodrevs:
            ancestors[rev] = []
        for rev in xrange(goodrev + 1, len(changelog)):
            for prev in clparents(rev):
                if ancestors[prev] == []:
                    ancestors[rev] = []

        # clear good revs from array
        for rev in goodrevs:
            ancestors[rev] = None
        for rev in xrange(len(changelog), goodrev, -1):
            if ancestors[rev] is None:
                for prev in clparents(rev):
                    ancestors[prev] = None

        if ancestors[badrev] is None:
            return badrev, None
        return badrev, ancestors

    good = False
    badrev, ancestors = buildancestors(state['bad'], state['good'])
    if not ancestors: # looking for bad to good transition?
        good = True
        badrev, ancestors = buildancestors(state['good'], state['bad'])
    bad = changelog.node(badrev)
    if not ancestors: # now we're confused
        if len(state['bad']) == 1 and len(state['good']) == 1:
            raise util.Abort(_("starting revisions are not directly related"))
        raise util.Abort(_("inconsistent state, %s:%s is good and bad")
                         % (badrev, short(bad)))

    # build children dict
    children = {}
    visit = [badrev]
    candidates = []
    while visit:
        rev = visit.pop(0)
        if ancestors[rev] == []:
            candidates.append(rev)
            for prev in clparents(rev):
                if prev != -1:
                    if prev in children:
                        children[prev].append(rev)
                    else:
                        children[prev] = [rev]
                        visit.append(prev)

    candidates.sort()
    # have we narrowed it down to one entry?
    # or have all other possible candidates besides 'bad' have been skipped?
    tot = len(candidates)
    unskipped = [c for c in candidates if (c not in skip) and (c != badrev)]
    if tot == 1 or not unskipped:
        return ([changelog.node(rev) for rev in candidates], 0, good)
    perfect = tot // 2

    # find the best node to test
    best_rev = None
    best_len = -1
    poison = set()
    for rev in candidates:
        if rev in poison:
            # poison children
            poison.update(children.get(rev, []))
            continue

        a = ancestors[rev] or [rev]
        ancestors[rev] = None

        x = len(a) # number of ancestors
        y = tot - x # number of non-ancestors
        value = min(x, y) # how good is this test?
        if value > best_len and rev not in skip:
            best_len = value
            best_rev = rev
            if value == perfect: # found a perfect candidate? quit early
                break

        if y < perfect and rev not in skip: # all downhill from here?
            # poison children
            poison.update(children.get(rev, []))
            continue

        for c in children.get(rev, []):
            if ancestors[c]:
                ancestors[c] = list(set(ancestors[c] + a))
            else:
                ancestors[c] = a + [c]

    assert best_rev is not None
    best_node = changelog.node(best_rev)

    return ([best_node], tot, good)


def load_state(repo):
    state = {'good': [], 'bad': [], 'skip': []}
    if os.path.exists(repo.join("bisect.state")):
        for l in repo.opener("bisect.state"):
            kind, node = l[:-1].split()
            node = repo.lookup(node)
            if kind not in state:
                raise util.Abort(_("unknown bisect kind %s") % kind)
            state[kind].append(node)
    return state


def save_state(repo, state):
    f = repo.opener("bisect.state", "w", atomictemp=True)
    wlock = repo.wlock()
    try:
        for kind in state:
            for node in state[kind]:
                f.write("%s %s\n" % (kind, hex(node)))
        f.close()
    finally:
        wlock.release()