contrib/undumprevlog
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
Thu, 30 Mar 2017 00:27:46 -0400
changeset 33493 9a9f95214f46
parent 31248 8d3e8c8c9049
child 33872 5d9890d8ca77
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
debug: add a method to check the state of, and built an SSL cert chain This is only useful on Windows, and avoids the need to use Internet Explorer to build the certificate chain. I can see this being extended in the future to print information about the certificate(s) to help debug issues on any platform. Maybe even perform some of the python checks listed on the secure connections wiki page. But for now, all I need is 1) a command that can be invoked in a setup script to ensure the certificate is installed, and 2) a command that the user can run if/when a certificate changes in the future. It would have been nice to leverage the sslutil library to pick up host specific settings, but attempting to use sslutil.wrapsocket() failed the 'not sslsocket.cipher()' check in it and aborted. The output is a little more chatty than some commands, but I've seen the update take 10+ seconds, and this is only a debug command.

#!/usr/bin/env python
# Undump a dump from dumprevlog
# $ hg init
# $ undumprevlog < repo.dump

from __future__ import absolute_import

import sys
from mercurial import (
    node,
    revlog,
    transaction,
    util,
    vfs as vfsmod,
)

for fp in (sys.stdin, sys.stdout, sys.stderr):
    util.setbinary(fp)

opener = vfsmod.vfs('.', False)
tr = transaction.transaction(sys.stderr.write, opener, {'store': opener},
                             "undump.journal")
while True:
    l = sys.stdin.readline()
    if not l:
        break
    if l.startswith("file:"):
        f = l[6:-1]
        r = revlog.revlog(opener, f)
        print f
    elif l.startswith("node:"):
        n = node.bin(l[6:-1])
    elif l.startswith("linkrev:"):
        lr = int(l[9:-1])
    elif l.startswith("parents:"):
        p = l[9:-1].split()
        p1 = node.bin(p[0])
        p2 = node.bin(p[1])
    elif l.startswith("length:"):
        length = int(l[8:-1])
        sys.stdin.readline() # start marker
        d = sys.stdin.read(length)
        sys.stdin.readline() # end marker
        r.addrevision(d, tr, lr, p1, p2)

tr.close()