~bzr-pqm/bzr/bzr.dev

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# Copyright (C) 2007 Canonical Ltd
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA

"""Helper functions for DirState.

This is the python implementation for DirState functions.
"""

from bzrlib.dirstate import DirState


# Give Pyrex some function definitions for it to understand.
# All of these are just hints to Pyrex, so that it can try to convert python
# objects into similar C objects. (such as PyInt => int).
# In anything defined 'cdef extern from XXX' the real C header will be
# imported, and the real definition will be used from there. So these are just
# hints, and do not need to match exactly to the C definitions.

cdef extern from *:
    ctypedef unsigned long size_t

cdef extern from "stdint.h":
    ctypedef int intptr_t


cdef extern from "stdlib.h":
    unsigned long int strtoul(char *nptr, char **endptr, int base)


# These functions allow us access to a bit of the 'bare metal' of python
# objects, rather than going through the object abstraction. (For example,
# PyList_Append, rather than getting the 'append' attribute of the object, and
# creating a tuple, and then using PyCallObject).
# Functions that return (or take) a void* are meant to grab a C PyObject*. This
# differs from the Pyrex 'object'. If you declare a variable as 'object' Pyrex
# will automatically Py_INCREF and Py_DECREF when appropriate. But for some
# inner loops, we don't need to do that at all, as the reference only lasts for
# a very short time.
cdef extern from "Python.h":
    int PyList_Append(object lst, object item) except -1
    void *PyList_GetItem_object_void "PyList_GET_ITEM" (object lst, int index)
    int PyList_CheckExact(object)

    void *PyTuple_GetItem_void_void "PyTuple_GET_ITEM" (void* tpl, int index)

    char *PyString_AsString(object p)
    char *PyString_AS_STRING_void "PyString_AS_STRING" (void *p)
    object PyString_FromString(char *)
    object PyString_FromStringAndSize(char *, int)
    int PyString_Size(object p)
    int PyString_GET_SIZE_void "PyString_GET_SIZE" (void *p)
    int PyString_CheckExact(object p)


cdef extern from "string.h":
    int strncmp(char *s1, char *s2, int len)
    void *memchr(void *s, int c, size_t len)
    int memcmp(void *b1, void *b2, size_t len)
    # ??? memrchr is a GNU extension :(
    # void *memrchr(void *s, int c, size_t len)


cdef void* _my_memrchr(void *s, int c, size_t n):
    # memrchr seems to be a GNU extension, so we have to implement it ourselves
    cdef char *pos
    cdef char *start

    start = <char*>s
    pos = start + n - 1
    while pos >= start:
        if pos[0] == c:
            return <void*>pos
        pos = pos - 1
    return NULL


def _py_memrchr(s, c):
    """Just to expose _my_memrchr for testing.

    :param s: The Python string to search
    :param c: The character to search for
    :return: The offset to the last instance of 'c' in s
    """
    cdef void *_s
    cdef void *found
    cdef int length
    cdef char *_c

    _s = PyString_AsString(s)
    length = PyString_Size(s)

    _c = PyString_AsString(c)
    assert PyString_Size(c) == 1,\
        'Must be a single character string, not %s' % (c,)
    found = _my_memrchr(_s, _c[0], length)
    if found == NULL:
        return None
    return found - _s


cdef int _is_aligned(void *ptr):
    """Is this pointer aligned to an integer size offset?

    :return: 1 if this pointer is aligned, 0 otherwise.
    """
    return ((<intptr_t>ptr) & ((sizeof(int))-1)) == 0


cdef int _cmp_by_dirs(char *path1, int size1, char *path2, int size2):
    cdef unsigned char *cur1
    cdef unsigned char *cur2
    cdef unsigned char *end1
    cdef unsigned char *end2
    cdef int *cur_int1
    cdef int *cur_int2
    cdef int *end_int1
    cdef int *end_int2

    if path1 == path2 and size1 == size2:
        return 0

    end1 = <unsigned char*>path1+size1
    end2 = <unsigned char*>path2+size2

    # Use 32-bit comparisons for the matching portion of the string.
    # Almost all CPU's are faster at loading and comparing 32-bit integers,
    # than they are at 8-bit integers.
    # 99% of the time, these will be aligned, but in case they aren't just skip
    # this loop
    if _is_aligned(path1) and _is_aligned(path2):
        cur_int1 = <int*>path1
        cur_int2 = <int*>path2
        end_int1 = <int*>(path1 + size1 - (size1 % sizeof(int)))
        end_int2 = <int*>(path2 + size2 - (size2 % sizeof(int)))

        while cur_int1 < end_int1 and cur_int2 < end_int2:
            if cur_int1[0] != cur_int2[0]:
                break
            cur_int1 = cur_int1 + 1
            cur_int2 = cur_int2 + 1

        cur1 = <unsigned char*>cur_int1
        cur2 = <unsigned char*>cur_int2
    else:
        cur1 = <unsigned char*>path1
        cur2 = <unsigned char*>path2

    while cur1 < end1 and cur2 < end2:
        if cur1[0] == cur2[0]:
            # This character matches, just go to the next one
            cur1 = cur1 + 1
            cur2 = cur2 + 1
            continue
        # The current characters do not match
        if cur1[0] == c'/':
            return -1 # Reached the end of path1 segment first
        elif cur2[0] == c'/':
            return 1 # Reached the end of path2 segment first
        elif cur1[0] < cur2[0]:
            return -1
        else:
            return 1

    # We reached the end of at least one of the strings
    if cur1 < end1:
        return 1 # Not at the end of cur1, must be at the end of cur2
    if cur2 < end2:
        return -1 # At the end of cur1, but not at cur2
    # We reached the end of both strings
    return 0


def cmp_by_dirs_c(path1, path2):
    """Compare two paths directory by directory.

    This is equivalent to doing::

       cmp(path1.split('/'), path2.split('/'))

    The idea is that you should compare path components separately. This
    differs from plain ``cmp(path1, path2)`` for paths like ``'a-b'`` and
    ``a/b``. "a-b" comes after "a" but would come before "a/b" lexically.

    :param path1: first path
    :param path2: second path
    :return: positive number if ``path1`` comes first,
        0 if paths are equal,
        and negative number if ``path2`` sorts first
    """
    if not PyString_CheckExact(path1):
        raise TypeError("'path1' must be a plain string, not %s: %r"
                        % (type(path1), path1))
    if not PyString_CheckExact(path2):
        raise TypeError("'path2' must be a plain string, not %s: %r"
                        % (type(path2), path2))
    return _cmp_by_dirs(PyString_AsString(path1),
                        PyString_Size(path1),
                        PyString_AsString(path2),
                        PyString_Size(path2))


def _cmp_path_by_dirblock_c(path1, path2):
    """Compare two paths based on what directory they are in.

    This generates a sort order, such that all children of a directory are
    sorted together, and grandchildren are in the same order as the
    children appear. But all grandchildren come after all children.

    In other words, all entries in a directory are sorted together, and
    directorys are sorted in cmp_by_dirs order.

    :param path1: first path
    :param path2: the second path
    :return: positive number if ``path1`` comes first,
        0 if paths are equal
        and a negative number if ``path2`` sorts first
    """
    if not PyString_CheckExact(path1):
        raise TypeError("'path1' must be a plain string, not %s: %r"
                        % (type(path1), path1))
    if not PyString_CheckExact(path2):
        raise TypeError("'path2' must be a plain string, not %s: %r"
                        % (type(path2), path2))
    return _cmp_path_by_dirblock(PyString_AsString(path1),
                                 PyString_Size(path1),
                                 PyString_AsString(path2),
                                 PyString_Size(path2))


cdef int _cmp_path_by_dirblock(char *path1, int path1_len,
                               char *path2, int path2_len):
    """Compare two paths by what directory they are in.

    see ``_cmp_path_by_dirblock_c`` for details.
    """
    cdef char *dirname1
    cdef int dirname1_len
    cdef char *dirname2
    cdef int dirname2_len
    cdef char *basename1
    cdef int basename1_len
    cdef char *basename2
    cdef int basename2_len
    cdef int cur_len
    cdef int cmp_val

    if path1_len == 0 and path2_len == 0:
        return 0

    if path1 == path2 and path1_len == path2_len:
        return 0

    if path1_len == 0:
        return -1

    if path2_len == 0:
        return 1

    basename1 = <char*>_my_memrchr(path1, c'/', path1_len)

    if basename1 == NULL:
        basename1 = path1
        basename1_len = path1_len
        dirname1 = ''
        dirname1_len = 0
    else:
        dirname1 = path1
        dirname1_len = basename1 - path1
        basename1 = basename1 + 1
        basename1_len = path1_len - dirname1_len - 1

    basename2 = <char*>_my_memrchr(path2, c'/', path2_len)

    if basename2 == NULL:
        basename2 = path2
        basename2_len = path2_len
        dirname2 = ''
        dirname2_len = 0
    else:
        dirname2 = path2
        dirname2_len = basename2 - path2
        basename2 = basename2 + 1
        basename2_len = path2_len - dirname2_len - 1

    cmp_val = _cmp_by_dirs(dirname1, dirname1_len,
                           dirname2, dirname2_len)
    if cmp_val != 0:
        return cmp_val

    cur_len = basename1_len
    if basename2_len < basename1_len:
        cur_len = basename2_len

    cmp_val = memcmp(basename1, basename2, cur_len)
    if cmp_val != 0:
        return cmp_val
    if basename1_len == basename2_len:
        return 0
    if basename1_len < basename2_len:
        return -1
    return 1


def _bisect_path_left_c(paths, path):
    """Return the index where to insert path into paths.

    This uses a path-wise comparison so we get::
        a
        a-b
        a=b
        a/b
    Rather than::
        a
        a-b
        a/b
        a=b
    :param paths: A list of paths to search through
    :param path: A single path to insert
    :return: An offset where 'path' can be inserted.
    :seealso: bisect.bisect_left
    """
    cdef int _lo
    cdef int _hi
    cdef int _mid
    cdef char *path_cstr
    cdef int path_size
    cdef char *cur_cstr
    cdef int cur_size
    cdef void *cur

    if not PyList_CheckExact(paths):
        raise TypeError("you must pass a python list for 'paths' not: %s %r"
                        % (type(paths), paths))
    if not PyString_CheckExact(path):
        raise TypeError("you must pass a string for 'path' not: %s %r"
                        % (type(path), path))

    _hi = len(paths)
    _lo = 0

    path_cstr = PyString_AsString(path)
    path_size = PyString_Size(path)

    while _lo < _hi:
        _mid = (_lo + _hi) / 2
        cur = PyList_GetItem_object_void(paths, _mid)
        cur_cstr = PyString_AS_STRING_void(cur)
        cur_size = PyString_GET_SIZE_void(cur)
        if _cmp_path_by_dirblock(cur_cstr, cur_size, path_cstr, path_size) < 0:
            _lo = _mid + 1
        else:
            _hi = _mid
    return _lo


def _bisect_path_right_c(paths, path):
    """Return the index where to insert path into paths.

    This uses a path-wise comparison so we get::
        a
        a-b
        a=b
        a/b
    Rather than::
        a
        a-b
        a/b
        a=b
    :param paths: A list of paths to search through
    :param path: A single path to insert
    :return: An offset where 'path' can be inserted.
    :seealso: bisect.bisect_right
    """
    cdef int _lo
    cdef int _hi
    cdef int _mid
    cdef char *path_cstr
    cdef int path_size
    cdef char *cur_cstr
    cdef int cur_size
    cdef void *cur

    if not PyList_CheckExact(paths):
        raise TypeError("you must pass a python list for 'paths' not: %s %r"
                        % (type(paths), paths))
    if not PyString_CheckExact(path):
        raise TypeError("you must pass a string for 'path' not: %s %r"
                        % (type(path), path))

    _hi = len(paths)
    _lo = 0

    path_cstr = PyString_AsString(path)
    path_size = PyString_Size(path)

    while _lo < _hi:
        _mid = (_lo + _hi) / 2
        cur = PyList_GetItem_object_void(paths, _mid)
        cur_cstr = PyString_AS_STRING_void(cur)
        cur_size = PyString_GET_SIZE_void(cur)
        if _cmp_path_by_dirblock(path_cstr, path_size, cur_cstr, cur_size) < 0:
            _hi = _mid
        else:
            _lo = _mid + 1
    return _lo


def bisect_dirblock_c(dirblocks, dirname, lo=0, hi=None, cache=None):
    """Return the index where to insert dirname into the dirblocks.

    The return value idx is such that all directories blocks in dirblock[:idx]
    have names < dirname, and all blocks in dirblock[idx:] have names >=
    dirname.

    Optional args lo (default 0) and hi (default len(dirblocks)) bound the
    slice of a to be searched.
    """
    cdef int _lo
    cdef int _hi
    cdef int _mid
    cdef char *dirname_cstr
    cdef int dirname_size
    cdef char *cur_cstr
    cdef int cur_size
    cdef void *cur

    if not PyList_CheckExact(dirblocks):
        raise TypeError("you must pass a python list for 'dirblocks' not: %s %r"
                        % (type(dirblocks), dirblocks))
    if not PyString_CheckExact(dirname):
        raise TypeError("you must pass a string for dirname not: %s %r"
                        % (type(dirname), dirname))
    if hi is None:
        _hi = len(dirblocks)
    else:
        _hi = hi

    _lo = lo
    dirname_cstr = PyString_AsString(dirname)
    dirname_size = PyString_Size(dirname)

    while _lo < _hi:
        _mid = (_lo + _hi) / 2
        # Grab the dirname for the current dirblock
        # cur = dirblocks[_mid][0]
        cur = PyTuple_GetItem_void_void(
                PyList_GetItem_object_void(dirblocks, _mid), 0)
        cur_cstr = PyString_AS_STRING_void(cur)
        cur_size = PyString_GET_SIZE_void(cur)
        if _cmp_by_dirs(cur_cstr, cur_size, dirname_cstr, dirname_size) < 0:
            _lo = _mid + 1
        else:
            _hi = _mid
    return _lo


cdef class Reader:
    """Maintain the current location, and return fields as you parse them."""

    cdef object text # The overall string object
    cdef char *text_cstr # Pointer to the beginning of text
    cdef int text_size # Length of text

    cdef char *end_cstr # End of text
    cdef char *cur_cstr # Pointer to the current record
    cdef char *next # Pointer to the end of this record

    def __new__(self, text):
        self.text = text
        self.text_cstr = PyString_AsString(text)
        self.text_size = PyString_Size(text)
        self.end_cstr = self.text_cstr + self.text_size
        self.cur_cstr = self.text_cstr

    cdef char *get_next(self, int *size):
        """Return a pointer to the start of the next field."""
        cdef char *next
        next = self.cur_cstr
        self.cur_cstr = <char*>memchr(next, c'\0', self.end_cstr-next)
        size[0] = self.cur_cstr - next
        self.cur_cstr = self.cur_cstr + 1
        return next

    cdef object get_next_str(self):
        """Get the next field as a Python string."""
        cdef int size
        cdef char *next
        next = self.get_next(&size)
        return PyString_FromStringAndSize(next, size)

    cdef int _init(self) except -1:
        """Get the pointer ready.

        This assumes that the dirstate header has already been read, and we
        already have the dirblock string loaded into memory.
        This just initializes our memory pointers, etc for parsing of the
        dirblock string.
        """
        cdef char *first
        cdef int size
        # The first field should be an empty string left over from the Header
        first = self.get_next(&size)
        if first[0] != c'\0' and size == 0:
            raise AssertionError('First character should be null not: %s'
                                 % (first,))
        return 0

    cdef object _get_entry(self, int num_trees, void **p_current_dirname,
                           int *new_block):
        """Extract the next entry.

        This parses the next entry based on the current location in
        ``self.cur_cstr``.
        Each entry can be considered a "row" in the total table. And each row
        has a fixed number of columns. It is generally broken up into "key"
        columns, then "current" columns, and then "parent" columns.

        :param num_trees: How many parent trees need to be parsed
        :param p_current_dirname: A pointer to the current PyString
            representing the directory name.
            We pass this in as a void * so that pyrex doesn't have to
            increment/decrement the PyObject reference counter for each
            _get_entry call.
            We use a pointer so that _get_entry can update it with the new
            value.
        :param new_block: This is to let the caller know that it needs to
            create a new directory block to store the next entry.
        """
        cdef object path_name_file_id_key
        cdef char *entry_size_cstr
        cdef unsigned long int entry_size
        cdef char* executable_cstr
        cdef int is_executable
        cdef char* dirname_cstr
        cdef char* trailing
        cdef int cur_size
        cdef int i
        cdef object minikind
        cdef object fingerprint
        cdef object info

        # Read the 'key' information (dirname, name, file_id)
        dirname_cstr = self.get_next(&cur_size)
        # Check to see if we have started a new directory block.
        # If so, then we need to create a new dirname PyString, so that it can
        # be used in all of the tuples. This saves time and memory, by re-using
        # the same object repeatedly.

        # Do the cheap 'length of string' check first. If the string is a
        # different length, then we *have* to be a different directory.
        if (cur_size != PyString_GET_SIZE_void(p_current_dirname[0])
            or strncmp(dirname_cstr,
                       # Extract the char* from our current dirname string.  We
                       # know it is a PyString, so we can use
                       # PyString_AS_STRING, we use the _void version because
                       # we are tricking Pyrex by using a void* rather than an
                       # <object>
                       PyString_AS_STRING_void(p_current_dirname[0]),
                       cur_size+1) != 0):
            dirname = PyString_FromStringAndSize(dirname_cstr, cur_size)
            p_current_dirname[0] = <void*>dirname
            new_block[0] = 1
        else:
            new_block[0] = 0

        # Build up the key that will be used.
        # By using <object>(void *) Pyrex will automatically handle the
        # Py_INCREF that we need.
        path_name_file_id_key = (<object>p_current_dirname[0],
                                 self.get_next_str(),
                                 self.get_next_str(),
                                )

        # Parse all of the per-tree information. current has the information in
        # the same location as parent trees. The only difference is that 'info'
        # is a 'packed_stat' for current, while it is a 'revision_id' for
        # parent trees.
        # minikind, fingerprint, and info will be returned as regular python
        # strings
        # entry_size and is_executable will be parsed into a python Long and
        # python Boolean, respectively.
        # TODO: jam 20070718 Consider changin the entry_size conversion to
        #       prefer python Int when possible. They are generally faster to
        #       work with, and it will be rare that we have a file >2GB.
        #       Especially since this code is pretty much fixed at a max of
        #       4GB.
        trees = []
        for i from 0 <= i < num_trees:
            minikind = self.get_next_str()
            fingerprint = self.get_next_str()
            entry_size_cstr = self.get_next(&cur_size)
            entry_size = strtoul(entry_size_cstr, NULL, 10)
            executable_cstr = self.get_next(&cur_size)
            is_executable = (executable_cstr[0] == c'y')
            info = self.get_next_str()
            PyList_Append(trees, (
                minikind,     # minikind
                fingerprint,  # fingerprint
                entry_size,   # size
                is_executable,# executable
                info,         # packed_stat or revision_id
            ))

        # The returned tuple is (key, [trees])
        ret = (path_name_file_id_key, trees)
        # Ignore the trailing newline, but assert that it does exist, this
        # ensures that we always finish parsing a line on an end-of-entry
        # marker.
        trailing = self.get_next(&cur_size)
        if cur_size != 1 or trailing[0] != c'\n':
            raise AssertionError(
                'Bad parse, we expected to end on \\n, not: %d %s: %s'
                % (cur_size, PyString_FromStringAndSize(trailing, cur_size),
                   ret))
        return ret

    def _parse_dirblocks(self, state):
        """Parse all dirblocks in the state file."""
        cdef int num_trees
        cdef object current_block
        cdef object entry
        cdef void * current_dirname
        cdef int new_block
        cdef int expected_entry_count
        cdef int entry_count

        num_trees = state._num_present_parents() + 1
        expected_entry_count = state._num_entries

        # Ignore the first record
        self._init()

        current_block = []
        state._dirblocks = [('', current_block), ('', [])]
        obj = ''
        current_dirname = <void*>obj
        new_block = 0
        entry_count = 0

        # TODO: jam 2007-05-07 Consider pre-allocating some space for the
        #       members, and then growing and shrinking from there. If most
        #       directories have close to 10 entries in them, it would save a
        #       few mallocs if we default our list size to something
        #       reasonable. Or we could malloc it to something large (100 or
        #       so), and then truncate. That would give us a malloc + realloc,
        #       rather than lots of reallocs.
        while self.cur_cstr < self.end_cstr:
            entry = self._get_entry(num_trees, &current_dirname, &new_block)
            if new_block:
                # new block - different dirname
                current_block = []
                PyList_Append(state._dirblocks,
                              (<object>current_dirname, current_block))
            PyList_Append(current_block, entry)
            entry_count = entry_count + 1
        if entry_count != expected_entry_count:
            raise AssertionError('We read the wrong number of entries.'
                    ' We expected to read %s, but read %s'
                    % (expected_entry_count, entry_count))
        state._split_root_dirblock_into_contents()


def _read_dirblocks_c(state):
    """Read in the dirblocks for the given DirState object.

    This is tightly bound to the DirState internal representation. It should be
    thought of as a member function, which is only separated out so that we can
    re-write it in pyrex.

    :param state: A DirState object.
    :return: None
    :postcondition: The dirblocks will be loaded into the appropriate fields in
        the DirState object.
    """
    state._state_file.seek(state._end_of_header)
    text = state._state_file.read()
    # TODO: check the crc checksums. crc_measured = zlib.crc32(text)

    reader = Reader(text)

    reader._parse_dirblocks(state)
    state._dirblock_state = DirState.IN_MEMORY_UNMODIFIED