As preparation for making 'dr' and 'rd' actions no longer actions,
move the reporting from applyupdates() to its caller update(). This
way we won't have to pass additonal arguments to applyupdates() when
they are no longer actions. Also, the warnings are equally unrelated
to applyupdates() as they are to recordupdates(), as they don't result
in any changes to either the working copy or the dirstate.
See earlier patch for additional motivation.
It is easier to reason about certain algorithms in terms of a
file->action mapping than the current action->list-of-files. Bid merge
is already written this way (but with a list of actions per file), and
largefiles' overridecalculateupdates() will also benefit. However,
that requires us to have at most one action per file. That requirement
is currently violated by 'dr' (divergent rename) and 'rd' (rename and
delete) actions, which can exist for the same file as some other
action.
These actions are only used for displaying warnings to the user; they
don't change anything in the working copy or the dirstate. In this
way, they are similar to the 'k' (keep) action. However, they are even
less action-like than 'k' is: 'k' at least describes what to do with
the file ("do nothing"), while 'dr' and 'rd' or only annotations for
files for which there may exist other, "real" actions.
As a first step towards separating these acitons out, stop including
them in the progress output, just like we already exclude the 'k'
action.
So far, git subrepositories were silently ignored for diffs.
This patch adds support for git subrepositories,
with the remark that --include and --exclude are not supported.
If --include or --exclude are used, the subrepo is ignored.
It deserves more than a debug message. Show a note like:
updating mq patch p0.patch to 5:9ecc820b1737
The message could also refer to "qrefresh" instead. Same same.
Show status messages while rebasing, similar to what graft do:
rebasing 12:2647734878ef "fork" (tip)
This gives more context for the user when resolving conflicts.
Globbing the hash made it harder to maintain tests with run-tests -i when it
was so far by the generated test output.
The hashes are stable and we just need to add a (glob).
Using 'addfinalize' to generate 'fncache' means that no pending version of the
file will be generated for the hooks. We would have to use the
'addfilegenerator' method to get such result. However the 'fncachevfs' (who
decide that a write is necessary) have no access to the transaction to register
such file generation at add time. Having the transaction accessible to the 'vfs'
is too much trouble for no benefit. This outdated 'fncache' file at hook time is
not expected to be an issue.
The previous move from 'onclose' to 'addfinalize' had no impact on this timing.
I'm documenting it now because I looked at it.
It was just showing a status message with the internal revision number.
Instead, show a warning like
note: graft of 27:3aaa8b6725f0 "28" created no changes to commit
(message tweaked in-flight by mpm)
Show status messages with first line of commit description and names, like
grafting 12:2647734878ef "fork" (tip)
This gives more context for the user when resolving conflicts.
The log/graphlog revset was not producing stable results since it was
iterating over a dict. Now we sort before iterating to guarantee a fixed order.
This fixes some potential flakiness in the tests.
It doesn't seem to be a common idiom for repo instances, but the status() method
is replaced in largefiles' purge() override. Since __setattr__ is implemented
in repoview to setattr() on the unfiltered repo, the replacement method wouldn't
get called unless it was invoked with the unfiltered repo, because the filtered
repo remains unchanged.
Since this doesn't seem to be commonly used, I didn't bother to filter out
methods that perhaps shouldn't be replaced, such as changelog().
The revset created when -f was used with a slow path (for patterns and
directories) did not actually contain any logic to enforce follow. Instead it
was depending on the passed in subset to already be limited (which was limited
to :. but not ::.). This fixes it by adding a '& ::.' to any -f log revset.
hg log -f <file> is still broken, in that it can return results that aren't
actually ancestors of the current file, but fixing that has major perf
implications, so we'll deal with it later.
We have two different types of node type (sha1 and sha256, only sha1 is used
now) and therefor different sizes for them. We now compute the value once
instead of redoing the computation every loop. This has no visible performance
impact.
Python garbage collection is triggered by container creation. So code that
creates a lot of tuples tends to trigger GC a lot. We disable the gc during
obsolescence marker parsing and associated initialization. This provides an
interesting speedup (25%).
Load marker function on my 58758 markers repo:
before: 0.468247 seconds
after: 0.344362 seconds
The benefit is a bit less visible overall. With python2.6 on my system I see:
after: 0.60
before: 0.53
The difference is probably explained by the delaying of a costly GC. (but there
is still a win). Marking involved tuples, lists and dicts as ignorable by the
garbage collector should give us more benefit. But this is another adventure.
Thanks goes to Siddharth Agarwal for the lead.
Garbage collection behave pathologically when creating a lot of containers. As
we do that more than once it become sensible to have a decorator for it. See
inline documentation for details.
When merging and the remote has turned a normal file into a largefile
and the user chooses to keep the local largefile, we use the 'r'
action for the remote largefile standin. This is wrong, since that
file does not exist in the parent of the working copy. Use 'k', which
does nothing but debug logging, instead.
When merging and the remote has turned a largefile into a normal file
and the user chooses to keep the local largefile, we use the 'r'
action for the remote normal file. This is wrong, since that file does
not exist in the parent of the working copy. Use 'k', which does
nothing but debug logging, instead.
Revtodo happens to share its value with nullrev, but this is an implementation
details, so we move away from it.
After this changeset one can successfully change the values for all
the constants and the tests still pass, but doing so would require more
refactoring if we want to avoid breaking backward compatibility on the
state file.
The state mapping is using '-1' to mark revisions that have not been
rebased yet. We introduce and use a constant for that purpose. This
will help emphasize the fact the value means something other than
nullrev.
When set to true, this option will make patchbomb always ask for confirmation
before sending the email. Confirmation is a powerful way to prevent stupid
mistakes when the sending patches.
This should let me get rid of my global alias adding
--confirm to hg email.
I know that some people may get bitten when moving from a machine with confirm
configured to a machine where it is not, but I think it is worth the risk.
This option allows the user to control the default behavior for
including an introduction message. This avoids having to tirelessly
skip the intro for people contributing to Mercurial.
The three possibles values are:
- always,
- auto (default, current behavior),
- never.
I was thinking of ("true", "false", "") (empty value being auto) but I ruled it
out as too confusing.
This new config option reuses the pre-existing 'patchbomb' section.
In c69fe5519c86 (largefiles: don't show largefile/normal prompts if
one side is unchanged, 2014-12-01), overridecalculateupdates() started
checking for false modify/delete conflicts in large files and their
standins. Then, in the very next changeset, 99b29d2bd5ed (merge:
before cd/dc prompt, check that changed side really changed,
2014-12-01), calculateupdates() itself started checking for false
modify/delete conflicts in all files. Since "large files and their
standins" is a subset of "all files", we can now drop the checks in
overridecalculateupdates().
Most merge action messages don't describe the action itself, they
describe the reason the action was taken. The only exeption is the 'k'
action, for which the message is just "keep" and instead there is a
code comment folling it that says "remote unchanged". Let's move that
comment into the merge action message.
This fixes the previously mentioned issue with 7d5fcea60c78, and undoes its
corresponding test change.
The test change demonstrates the correctness when a file is specified (i.e. the
glob is required on Windows because relative paths use '\' and absolute paths
use '/'). It is admittedly very subtle, but there will be a more robust test in
the addremove -S v3 series.
Several methods print files relative to the repo root, unless files are named on
the command line, in which case they are printed relative to cwd. Since the
check relies on the 'pats' parameter, which needs to be replaced by a matcher
when adding subrepo support, this logic gets folded into the matcher to tidy up
the callers.
Prior to 7d5fcea60c78, this style decision was based off of whether or not the
'pats' list was empty. That change altered the check to test match.anypats()
instead, in order to make paths printed consistent when -I/-X is specified.
That however, changed the style when a file is given to the command. So now we
test the pattern list to get the old behavior for files, as well as test -I/-X
to get the consistency for patterns.
When the local side has renamed a directory from a/ to b/ and added a
file b/c in it, and the remote side has added a file a/c, we end up
overwriting the local file b/c with the contents of remote file
a/c. Add a check for this case and use the merge ('m') action in this
case instead of the directory rename get ('dg') action.
When the remote side has renamed a directory from a/ to b/ and added a
file b/c in it, and the local side has added a file a/c, we end up
moving a/c to b/c without considering the remote version of b/c. Add a
check for this case and use the merge ('m') action in this case
instead of the directory rename ('dm') action.