The useful pudb debugger can be used with Mercurial, but its import of urwid
fails when demandimport is enabled. Add urwid.command_map to the ignore list so
pudb can be used with hg without disabling all of demandimport.
outgoing has been using an unfiltered repo since 07f64d64baf7 (discovery:
outgoing pass unfiltered repo to findcommonincoming (issue3776),
2013-01-28). If I'm reading code and history correctly, it should be
safe to run _outgoing() on a filtered repo since daf83ddd4afd
(discovery: run discovery on filtered repository, 2015-01-07). By
running _outgoing() on a filtered repo, we can also remove the
workaround there for ignoring filtered revisions.
The two functions 'getlocalchangegroup' and 'getchangegroup' have been strictly
identical for multiple years ('getchangegroup' had a deprecated docstring)
We'll drop one of them (getlocalchangegroup, since it has the longest name).
However, we needs to migrate all users of the dropped one to the new one before
we can deprecate it. In the mean time we drop one of the duplicated definition
and the outdated docstring.
Python 2:
>>> ls = []
>>> ls.extend(b'abc')
>>> ls
['a', 'b', 'c']
Python 3:
>>> ls = []
>>> ls.extend(b'abc')
>>> ls
[97, 98, 99]
So to make sure things work fine in Py3, this patch does:
>>> ls = []
>>> ls.extend([b'a', b'b', b'c'])
>>> ls
[b'a', b'b', b'c']
After this `hg log -G` works!
getattr passes a str value of the attribute to be looked and keys in adefaults
dict are bytes which resulted in AttributeError. This patch abuses r'' to
make the keys str.
The old merge code would call manifestmerge and calculate the complete diff
between the source to the destination. In many cases, like rebase, the vast
majority of differences between the source and destination are irrelevant
because they are differences between the destination and the common ancestor
only, and therefore don't affect the merge. Since most actions are 'keep', all
the effort to compute them is wasted.
Instead, let's compute the difference between the source and the common ancestor
and only perform the diff of those files against the merge destination. When
using treemanifest, this lets us avoid loading almost the entire tree when
rebasing from a very old ancestor. This speeds up rebase of an old stack of 27
commits by 20x.
In mozilla-central, without treemanifest, when rebasing a commit from
default~100000 to default, this speeds up the manifestmerge step from 2.6s to
1.2s. However, the additional diff adds an overhead to all manifestmerge calls,
especially for flat manifests. When rebasing a commit from default~1 to default
it appears to add 100ms in mozilla-central. While we could put this optimization
behind a flag, I think the fact that it makes merge O(number of changes being
applied) instead of O(number of changes between X and Y) justifies it.
It seems like localrepo.getbundle() is trying to do the same thing, so
let's just call the method. That way we get the same condition as
there (matching any "HG2" prefix, not only "HG20").
opts in add command were passed again to cmdutil.add() as kwargs so we need
to convert them again to str. Intstead we convert them to bytes when passing
scmutil.match(). Opts handling is also corrected for all the functions which
are called from cmdutil.add().
commands.commit() calls cmdutil.dorecord() where opts are passed as unicodes
being keyword arguments. This patch converts them back to bytes as they are
required.
Since keyword arguments can't be bytes on Python 3, we converted then to
unicodes before passing into different command functions. We need to adopt a
certain pattern to convert opts back to bytes. Following are some of the
functions which are called from inside these command functions and should
always be feeded bytes to follow the right behaviour.
ui.fomattter()
scmutil.match()
patch.diffallopts()
hg.peer()
cmdutil.{show_changeset|copy|graphrevs|checkunsupportedflag}
server.{createservice|runservice}
There are few commands which are left out where opts is again passed to a
function as keyword arguments or converting opts back to bytes is kind of
not necessary. Those are cat, revert, help, unbundle and rollback. Following
patches will deal with them. This patch apart from these five commands,
convert opts back to bytes for rest of the commands.
This fixes a lot of things which are hidden like --git works now. Similarly
more flags of commands which run on Python 3 currently get fixed.
As an aside, I'm having trouble parsing the help text meaning for HG when it is
unset or empty. How can it be the frozen name or searched if it is empty?
This may be too subtle of a change to get the point across, but when I first
read the original text, I thought maybe the pager would only be invoked if
writing more than a screenful. The distinction between this and a pager that
simply exits after printing less than a screenful is important on Windows, given
the inability of `more` to color output.
Even though I figured this out a few weeks ago, I was initially puzzled where
the color went when I upgraded to 4.2 on a different Windows machine. Let's
point users reading the help into the right direction.
I wonder if we should be even more explicit about cmd.exe/MSYS/pager/color
interplay, but at least all of the breadcrumbs are here (I think).
filectx provides "isbinary" to test if the data is binary. Let's use it.
This enables other filectx implementations (like LFS) to override the
isbinary test.
The matcher subinclude functionality allows us to have .hgignore files that
include subdirectory hgignore files. Today it parses the entire repo at once,
even if we only need to test a file in one subdirectory. This patch makes the
subinclude tree creation lazy, which speeds up matcher creation significantly in
large repos with very large trees of ignore patterns.
"hg bisect --reset" just deletes the state file (it doesn't move back
to the starting point like rebase does); it can not conflict with an
ongoing rebase etc.
checkunfinished() has this documentation:
It's probably good to check this right before bailifchanged().
So that's where I moved it.
Windows uses `more.com`, which unhelpfully adds an extra trailing line
consisting only of '\r'. It also converts tab characters to spaces, which
throws off the last two tests.
Setting the 'ui.formatted' option is what allowed the pager to be used by these
tests in the first place.
This option was never released except for a release candidate. Dropping
compatibility with this option will free the 'pager.enable' config option for
other usage in the future.
This aligns with what we do for color (see cea7a760c58d). Pager is a central
enough notion that having the master config in the [ui] section makes senses. It
will helps with consistency, discoverability. It will also help having a simple
and clear example hgrc mentioning pager.
The previous form of the option had never been released in a non-rc version but
we keep it around for convenience. If both are set, 'ui.pager' take priority.
Previously, 'ui.color=yes' meant "always show color", While
"ui.color=auto" meant "use color automatically when it appears
sensible".
This feels problematic to some people because if an administrator has
disabled color with "ui.color=off", and a user turn it back on using
"color=on", it will get surprised (because it breaks their output when
redirected to a file.) This patch changes ui.color=true to only move the
default value of --color from "never" to "auto".
I'm not really in favor of this changes as I suspect the above case will
be pretty rare and I would rather keep the logic simpler. However, I'm
providing this patch to help the 4.2 release in the case were others
decide to make this changes.
Users that want to force colors without specifying --color on the
command line can use the 'ui.formatted' config knob, which had to be
enabled in a handful of tests for this patch.
Nice summary table (credit: Augie Fackler)
That is, before this patch:
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| | not a tty | a tty |
| | --color not set | --color not set |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color (not set) | no color | no color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color = auto | no color | color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color = yes | *color* | color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color = no | no color | no color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
(if --color is specified, it always clobbers the setting in [ui])
and after this patch:
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| | not a tty | a tty |
| | --color not set | --color not set |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color (not set) | no color | no color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color = auto | no color | color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color = yes | *no color* | color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
| [ui] | | |
| color = no | no color | no color |
| | | |
+--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
(if --color is specified, it always clobbers the setting in [ui])