"Experimental" support for undoing past an object's creation. This
works by writing a metadata record which contains a special lrevid (pickle pointer). Upon loading a zombified object, naive applications will get a KeyError as would be expected for loading a non-existant object. The actual exception though is ObjectDoesNotExist -- derived from KeyError -- which contains a `revid' attribute pointing to the revision of the object which zombified it. Thus, by undoing this revid, the object can be reborn to its initial state. Specifically, ObjectDoesNotExist: New exception, derived from KeyError. load(): If an object's metadata has an lrevid with the special `dne' value (64-bits full of 1's), the object is a zombie and ObjectDoesNotExist is raised. transactionalUndo(): If prevrevid for the revision we're undoing is zero, it means that we're undoing the object's creation. Instead of raising an UndoError, write a new metadata record containing the original record, but with lrevid == dne, and prevrevid == tid. This change also contains initial (untested) support for pack(), specifically, _zaprevision(): pack doesn't happen in a transaction, so remove the txn argument. Add the referencesf argument, passed from the pack() call. pack(): Initial implementation. Seems fairly simple really (too simple? ;)
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