The defect was that copies were always duplicated against the target
revision, rather than the first parent of the revision being
rebased. This produced nominally correct results if changes were
rebased one at a time (or with --collapse), but was wrong if we
rebased a sequence of changesets which contained a sequence of copies.
This fixes a crash that may happen when using mercurial 3.0.x.
The _gethiddenblockers function assumed that the output of tags.readlocaltags()
was a dict mapping tags to of valid nodes. However this was not necessarily the
case. When a repository had obsolete revisions and had local tag pointing to a
non existing revision was found, many mercurial commands would crash.
This revision fixes the problem by removing any tags from the output of
tags.readlocaltags() which point to invalid nodes.
We may want to add a warning when this happens (although it might be
annoying to get that warning for every command, possibly even more than once per
command).
A test for this problem has been added to test-obsolete.t. Without this fix the
test would output:
$ hg tags
abort: 00changelog.i@3816541e5485: no node!
[255]
Instead of:
$ hg tags
tiptag 2:3816541e5485
tip 2:3816541e5485
visible 0:193e9254ce7e
This will make resolve use correct locking and thus make it more safe.
Resolve is usually a long running command spending a lot of time waiting for
user input on hard problems. It is thus a real world scenario to start multiple
resolves at once or run other commands (such as up -C and merge) while resolve
is running. Proper locking prevents that.
Before this patch, 'hg fetch' may cause unexpected conflict, if 'hg
fetch'-ed changes are located near lines in which keywords are
embedded, because keywords are substituted with other strings in the
working directory.
This patch suppresses keyword expansion while 'hg fetch' for internal
merge by adding 'fetch' to 'restricted' command list like 'merge'.
This patch uses 'hg import' to safely create the new head to be merged
at succeeding 'hg fetch', because:
- branch of revision #10 is different from one of #11 in 'Test'
repository, so just 'hg fetch -r 11' doesn't cause merging between
them
this means the new head should be created manually.
- 'hg import' is easier and safer than 'cat <<EOF' and 'hg commit'
to replay same changes including special characters like '$'
safeness of 'hg import' with keyword extension is already examined
in 'test-keyword.t'.
Before this patch, 'hg histedit' may cause unexpected conflict, if 'hg
histedit'-ed changes are located near lines in which keywords are
embedded, because keywords are substituted with other strings in the
working directory.
This patch suppresses keyword expansion while 'hg histedit' for
internal merge by adding 'histedit' to 'restricted' command list like
'merge'.
Test in this patch just swaps order of revision #13 and #14: this is
enough to cause internal merge.
Before this patch, 'hg backout' may cause unexpected conflict, if 'hg
backout'-ed changes are located near lines in which keywords are
embedded, because keywords are substituted with other strings in the
working directory.
This patch suppresses keyword expansion while 'hg backout' for
internal merge by adding 'backout' to 'restricted' command list like
'merge'.
Before this patch, 'hg graft' may cause unexpected conflict, if 'hg
graft'-ed changes are located near lines in which keywords are
embedded, because keywords are substituted with other strings in the
working directory.
This patch suppresses keyword expansion while 'hg graft' for internal
merge by adding 'graft' to 'restricted' command list like 'merge'.
Before this patch, 'hg rebase' may cause unexpected conflict, if 'hg
rebase'-ed changes are located near lines in which keywords are
embedded, because keywords are substituted with other strings in the
working directory.
This patch suppresses keyword expansion while 'hg rebase' for internal
merge by adding 'rebase' to 'restricted' command list like 'merge'.
This patch specifies '--keep' to 'hg rebase', because revision #10 is
useful also for tests in succeeding patches.
Before this patch, 'hg unshelve' may cause unexpected conflict, if 'hg
unshelve'-ed changes are located near lines in which keywords are
embedded, because keywords are substituted with other strings in the
working directory.
This patch suppresses keyword expansion while 'hg unshelve' for
internal merge by adding 'unshelve' to 'restricted' command list like
'merge'.
The onclose() closure added in 5264dbb2d4ee held a regular reference to
the transaction object. This was causing the transaction to not gc and
a leak to occur.
The closure now holds a reference to the weakref instance and the leak
goes away.
For now, getbundle accepts a fixed number of arguments: ``heads``, ``common``
and ``bundlecaps``. We make this list exposed at the module level to let
extensions add content there. This is important for extensions that wish to use
bundle2 for other contents than changegroup.
When bundle2 was enabled, if hg pull had no commits to pull, it would print
'no changes found' and then download the entire repository from the server. This
was caused by heads and common being set to None, which gets treated as
heads=cl.heads() and common=[nullid], which means download the entire repo.
Pulling bundles without a changegroup is a valid use case (like if we're just
updating bookmarks), so this modifes the bundle code to allow not adding
changegroups.
This is backport of 26ad3517a3a2.
During pulls bundle2 was checking server.bundle2, but during pushes it was
checking experimental.bundle2. This makes them both experimental.bundle2.
This is a backport of a9334b37b19a
No command should fail with ValueError just because there is unparseable
alias definition.
It returns 1 like other badalias handlers, but should be changed to 255 in
a later version because we use 255 for general command error.
Before this patch, "reporelpath()" uses "rstrip(os.sep)" to trim
"os.sep" at the end of "parent.root" path.
But it doesn't work correctly with some problematic encodings on
Windows, because some multi-byte characters in such encodings contain
'\\' (0x5c) as the tail byte of them.
In such cases, "reporelpath()" leaves unexpected '\\' at the beginning
of the path returned to callers.
"lcalrepository.root" seems not to have tail "os.sep", because it is
always normalized by "os.path.realpath()" in "vfs.__init__()", but in
fact it has tail "os.sep", if it is a root (of the drive): path
normalization trims tail "os.sep" off "/foo/bar/", but doesn't trim
one off "/".
So, just avoiding "rstrip(os.sep)" in "reporelpath()" causes
regression around issue3033 fixed by e3dfde137fa5.
This patch introduces "pathutil.normasprefix" to normalize specified
path in the specific way for problematic encodings without regression
around issue3033.
Before this patch, sanitizing ".hg/hgrc" scans directories and files
also in meta data area for non-hg subrepos: under ".svn" for
Subversion subrepo, for example.
This may cause not only performance impact (especially in large scale
subrepos) but also unexpected removing meta data files.
This patch avoids sanitizing ".hg/hgrc" in meta data area for non-hg
subrepos.
This patch stops checking "ignore" target at the first
(case-insensitive) appearance of it, because continuation of scanning
is meaningless in almost all cases.
Before this patch, "hg update" doesn't sanitize ".hg/hgrc" in non-hg
subrepos correctly, if "hg update" is executed not at the root of the
parent repository.
"_sanitize()" takes relative path to subrepo from the root of the
parent repository, and passes it to "os.walk()". In this case,
"os.walk()" expects CWD to be equal to the root of the parent
repository.
So, "os.walk()" can't find specified path (or may scan unexpected
path), if CWD isn't equal to the root of the parent repository.
Non-hg subrepo under nested hg-subrepos may cause same problem, too:
CWD may be equal to the root of the outer most repository, or so.
This patch makes "_sanitize()" take absolute path to the root of
subrepo to sanitize correctly in such cases.
This patch doesn't normalize the path to hostile files as the one
relative to CWD (or the root of the outer most repository), to fix the
problem in the simple way suitable for "stable".
Normalizing should be done in the future: maybe as a part of the
migration to vfs.
Before this patch, sanitizing ".hg/hgrc" in git subrepo doesn't work,
when the working directory is updated by "git merge --ff".
"_sanitize()" is not invoked after checking target revision out into
the working directory in this case, even though it is invoked
indirectly via "checkout" (or "rawcheckout") in other cases.
This patch invokes "_sanitize()" explicitly also after "git merge
--ff" execution.
"_sanitize()" was introduced by 5131f2755f60 on "stable" branch, but
it has done nothing for sanitizing since 5131f2755f60.
"_sanitize()" assumes "Visitor" design pattern:
"os.walk()" should invoke specified function ("v" in this case)
for each directory elements under specified path
but "os.walk()" assumes "Iterator" design pattern:
callers of it should drive loop to scan each directory elements
under specified path by themselves with the returned generator
object
Because of this mismatching, "_sanitize()" just discards the generator
object returned by "os.walk()" and does nothing for sanitizing.
This patch makes "_sanitize()" work.
This patch also changes the format of warning message to show each
unlinked files, for multiple appearances of "potentially hostile
.hg/hgrc".
This also includes test for shell aliases. It avoid using "false" command
because "man false" does not say "exit with 1" but "exit with a status code
indicating failure."
Python on Windows apparently use encoded stream by default. We use the same
trick than elsewhere in the code to make them binary.
This should fix the current buildbot failure on windows.
The ``localrepo.writepending`` method is using the ``changelog._delaybuff``
attribute to know if it has anything to do. However the ``changelog._delaybuff``
is never initialised at ``__init__`` time. This can lead to crash when using
bundle2 for part that never touch the changelog.
We simply initialize it to its base value. This is scheduled for stable as it
both trivial and blocking for experimenting with bundle2.
With Python 2.7.7rc1, "hg pull" through HTTP CONNECT tunnel fails due to the
removal of _set_hostport [1].
...
File "mercurial/url.py", line 372, in https_open
return self.do_open(self._makeconnection, req)
...
File "mercurial/url.py", line 342, in connect
_generic_proxytunnel(self)
File "mercurial/url.py", line 228, in _generic_proxytunnel
self._set_hostport(self.host, self.port)
AttributeError: httpsconnection instance has no attribute '_set_hostport'
self._set_hostport(self.host, self.port) should be noop and can be removed
because:
- _set_hostport() [2] was the function to parse "host:port" string and
set them to self.host and self.port,
- and (self.host, self.port) pair should be valid since connect() is called
prior to _generic_proxytunnel().
[1]: http://hg.python.org/cpython/rev/568041fd8090
[2]: http://hg.python.org/cpython/file/3a1db0d2747e/Lib/httplib.py#l721
Bugzilla 4.4.3 and later remove the old cookie based session authentication
from the Web Services API and replace it with a login token. The session
can now also be restricted to the originating IP.
Add the necessary to the extension so it works with 4.4.3 and later.
Previously the ifcontains revset was checking against the set using a pure
__contains__ check. It turns out the set was actually a list of
formatted strings meant for ui output, which meant the contains check failed if
the formatted string wasn't significantly different from the raw value.
This change makes it check against the raw data, prior to it being formatted.
This avoids a warning from msgfmt:
$ msgfmt -v -o mercurial/locale/zh_TW/LC_MESSAGES/hg.mo i18n/zh_TW.po -c
i18n/zh_TW.po:7: warning: header field 'Language' still has the
initial default value
"make clean" already removed __index__.py[cdo], but not the __index__.py
(automatically generated by "python setup.py build_hgextindex").
"setup.py build_hgextindex" did not generate a new index if file
__index__.py[cdo] already existed, because if __index__.py was removed,
the compiled file containing the old information was imported and used.
Generate an empty file (with a new timestamp to generate a new .py[cdo])
instead and make mercurial.extensions ignore the unset docs attribute.
One of the problems was a failed test-help.t, to reproduce:
$ rm hgext/__index__.py*
$ echo 'docs = {"mq": "dummy"}' > hgext/__index__.py
$ make test-help.t
With this a "make clean" or "python setup.py build_hgextindex" helps.
The error only occured when Python didn't have curses - such as on Windows and
when Python was built without curses support.
No curses can also be emulated by (re)moving .../lib/python2.7/curses/ from the
Python installation.
It is left as an exercise to figure out exactly what changed in Mercurial that
triggered this error.
This change conflicted with TortoiseHg's use of QFileSystemWatcher. Files which
were being monitored (for file-system events) were unable to be reliably updated
using util.atomictempfile. Often the update would error out in the middle of
the process leaving neither the old or the new file in place.
My guess is that _kernel32.CreateFileA() is triggering an exception that is
not handled correctly within unlink()
We get rid of lambda in a bunch of other place. This is equivalent and much
faster. (no new timing as this is the same change as three other changesets)