Mercurial > public > mercurial-scm > hg-stable
view mercurial/lock.py @ 19136:e073ac988b51
match: introduce explicitdir and traversedir
match.dir is currently called in two different places:
(1) noting when a directory specified explicitly is visited.
(2) noting when a directory is visited during a recursive walk.
purge cares about both, but commit only cares about the first.
Upcoming patches will split the two cases into two different callbacks. Why
bother? Consider a hypothetical extension that can provide more efficient walk
results, via e.g. watching the filesystem. That extension will need to
fall back to a full recursive walk if a callback is set for (2), but not if a
callback is only set for (1).
author | Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com> |
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date | Sun, 28 Apr 2013 21:24:09 -0700 |
parents | af9fa8d4c939 |
children | 76c83107a724 |
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# lock.py - simple advisory locking scheme for mercurial # # Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. import util, error import errno, os, socket, time import warnings class lock(object): '''An advisory lock held by one process to control access to a set of files. Non-cooperating processes or incorrectly written scripts can ignore Mercurial's locking scheme and stomp all over the repository, so don't do that. Typically used via localrepository.lock() to lock the repository store (.hg/store/) or localrepository.wlock() to lock everything else under .hg/.''' # lock is symlink on platforms that support it, file on others. # symlink is used because create of directory entry and contents # are atomic even over nfs. # old-style lock: symlink to pid # new-style lock: symlink to hostname:pid _host = None def __init__(self, file, timeout=-1, releasefn=None, desc=None): self.f = file self.held = 0 self.timeout = timeout self.releasefn = releasefn self.desc = desc self.postrelease = [] self.pid = os.getpid() self.lock() def __del__(self): if self.held: warnings.warn("use lock.release instead of del lock", category=DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) # ensure the lock will be removed # even if recursive locking did occur self.held = 1 self.release() def lock(self): timeout = self.timeout while True: try: self.trylock() return 1 except error.LockHeld, inst: if timeout != 0: time.sleep(1) if timeout > 0: timeout -= 1 continue raise error.LockHeld(errno.ETIMEDOUT, inst.filename, self.desc, inst.locker) def trylock(self): if self.held: self.held += 1 return if lock._host is None: lock._host = socket.gethostname() lockname = '%s:%s' % (lock._host, self.pid) while not self.held: try: util.makelock(lockname, self.f) self.held = 1 except (OSError, IOError), why: if why.errno == errno.EEXIST: locker = self.testlock() if locker is not None: raise error.LockHeld(errno.EAGAIN, self.f, self.desc, locker) else: raise error.LockUnavailable(why.errno, why.strerror, why.filename, self.desc) def testlock(self): """return id of locker if lock is valid, else None. If old-style lock, we cannot tell what machine locker is on. with new-style lock, if locker is on this machine, we can see if locker is alive. If locker is on this machine but not alive, we can safely break lock. The lock file is only deleted when None is returned. """ try: locker = util.readlock(self.f) except OSError, why: if why.errno == errno.ENOENT: return None raise try: host, pid = locker.split(":", 1) except ValueError: return locker if host != lock._host: return locker try: pid = int(pid) except ValueError: return locker if util.testpid(pid): return locker # if locker dead, break lock. must do this with another lock # held, or can race and break valid lock. try: l = lock(self.f + '.break', timeout=0) util.unlink(self.f) l.release() except error.LockError: return locker def release(self): """release the lock and execute callback function if any If the lock has been acquired multiple times, the actual release is delayed to the last release call.""" if self.held > 1: self.held -= 1 elif self.held == 1: self.held = 0 if os.getpid() != self.pid: # we forked, and are not the parent return if self.releasefn: self.releasefn() try: util.unlink(self.f) except OSError: pass for callback in self.postrelease: callback() def release(*locks): for lock in locks: if lock is not None: lock.release()