This is it, `hg strip --rev X` will now also remove obsolescence markers
exclusive to X. Since a previous changeset, the obsmarkers has been backed up
in the strip backup bundle, so it is possible to restore them.
Note: stripping obsmarkers means the precursors of the stripped changeset might no
longer be obsolete after the strip.
Stripping changeset without obsmarkers can be useful when building test case. So
It is possible to disable the stripping of obsmarkers using the
'devel.strip-obsmarkers' config option.
Test change have been carefully validated.
This set will be used to select the obsmarkers to be stripped alongside the
stripped changesets. See the function docstring for details.
More advanced testing is introduced in the next changesets to keep this one
simpler. That extra testing provides more example.
We are about to give 'strip' the ability to remove obsmarkers. Before we start
removing data we must make sure it is preserved somewhere. So the backup bundle
created by 'strip' now contains obsmarkers.
The improvement in time complexitty and the speed-up in computation is large
enough that the has little use now. Its update time can even gets in the way. So
we drop it.
This will allow us to unify the static/dynamic blockers logic in the next
changeset.
Also use the default-date when creating obsmarkers. Currently they are created
with the current date and without any option to force their value.
To test the feature, we remove some of the many 'glob' used to match obsmarker
date in the tests.
Receiving markers affecting changeset we'll receives later is legitimate and
not so uncommon case. Working on cache highlighted that this was only testing
in the evolve extension. We add a test for this case in core.
It seems better to introduce the experiment behind a flag for now as there are
multiple concerns around the feature:
* Storing operation increase the size of obsolescence markers significantly
(+10-20%).
* It performs poorly when exchanging markers (cannot combine command names,
command name might be unknown remotely, etc)
cmdutil.command wasn't a member of the registrar framework only for a
historical reason. Let's make that happen. This patch keeps cmdutil.command
as an alias for extension compatibility.
By recording what operation created the obsmarker, we can show very intuitive
messages to the user in various UIs. For instance, log output could have
messages like "Amended as XXX" to show why a commit is old and has an 'x' on it.
@ ac28e3 durham
/ First commit
|
| o d4afe7 durham
| | Second commit
| |
| x 8e9a5d (Amended as ac28e3) durham
|/ First commit
|
The conditional was updating the repository, which wasn't reflected in
subsequent logs on Windows, so the conditional is narrowed to just the serve
commands. The serve operation generates log files, so those are deleted to keep
the output of summary consistent.
The "troubles" template keyword returns a list of evolution troubles.
It is EXPERIMENTAL, as anything else related to changeset evolution.
Test it in test-obsolete.t which has troubled changesets.
It appears that computing index isn't cheap if --rev is specified. That's
why "index" field is available only if --index is specified.
I've named marker.flags() as "flag" because "flags" implies a list or dict
in template world.
Thanks to Piotr Listkiewicz for the initial implementation of this patch.
The only remaining usage of the experimental config were enforcing bundle2 on.
These are very old remains of when bundle2 was off by default. This was also
useful to highlight the fact that this was a bundle2 run and that a bundle1 one
was nearby. However, we want a future developer working on bundle3 to notice
possible output/behavior change on these tests and take them in account. So we
do not enforce bundle2 for these runs. We leave a comment around to make sure
dev still notice the bundle1 version.
This hasn't been testing anything since partway through the 3.7 cycle
due to unrelated refactoring. Sadly, the behavior it was trying to
prevent reemerged in the codebase at that time. A fix is in the next
patch, because proving that the fix was actually correct ended up
being trickier than I expected.
A bigger picture is the ability to be delete an arbitrary marker form the
repo's obsstore. This is a useful debug ability and it needs a way to indentify
the marker one wants to delete. Having a marker's index provides such an
ability.
Some tests fail while running with chg because they do not flush their output
streams. chgserver will make sure ui.flush is called after dispatch, but not
after {ui,repo}setup. For other non-ui streams, it should be explicitly
flushed since the request handler will use os._exit.
This patch adds explicit flushes in test-bundle2-format.t, test-extension.t
and test-obsolete.t. It will fix most test cases of them when running with chg.
The bundlerepository have to do some special magic to handle linkrev of the
bundlerepo filerev. That logic was done from a repoview and obsolescence marker
affecting bundled changeset could lead to a crash. We now ensure we operate on
unfiltered repository.
Before this patch if the hiddencache existed but was empty, it would crash
mercurial. This patch adds exception handling when reading the hiddencache to
avoid the issue.
When encountering a corrupted cache file we print a devel warning. There would
be no point in issuing a normal warning as the user wouldn't be able to do
anything about the situation.
The warning looks like:
devel-warn: corrupted hidden cache, removing it at: /path/to/repoview.py
This aligns with the unconditional plural output for the update line contents,
as well as the incoming/outgoing bookmarks line. It also matches the message
in evolve's summary hook as of 4f83b2d2d20d. (Though I thought this was removed
recently?)
The 'peer.known' call (handled at the repository level) was applying its own
manual filtering (looking at phases) instead of relying on the repoview
mechanism. This led to the discovery finding more "common" node that
'getbundle' was willing to recognised. From there, bad things happen, issue4982
is a symptom of it. While situations like described in issue4982 can still
happen because of race conditions, fixing 'peer.known' is important for
consistency in all cases.
We update the code to use 'repoview' filtering. This lead to small changes in
the tests for exchanging obsolescence marker because the discovery yields
different results.
The test affected in 'test-obsolete-changeset-exchange.t' is a test for
issue4982 getting back to its expected state.
A fix to issue4982 (not fixed in this patch) will reinforce the filtering
during discovery. This will makes two of our test repositories appear
unrelated (because all common content is properly hidden). To avoid this, we
introduce an extra base changeset that will not get obsoleted. This affects
various test output so we put this addition in its own changeset.
Context: the result of computehidden, used to compute the 'visible' revisions
is cached. Its output can change when:
1) new obsolete commits are created
2) new bookmarks are created or deleted
3) new tags are created or deleted
4) the parents of the working copy change
We currently correctly invalidate the cache only in the case 1).
This patch fixes the second case (bookmarks) by invalidating the cache once
a bookmark is added or removed.
$TESTDIR is added to the path, so this is superfluous. Also,
inconsistent use of quotes means we might have broken on tests with
paths containing spaces.
The phase of the pending commit depends on the parent of the working directory
and on the phases.newcommit configuration.
First, this information rather depend on the commit line which describe the
pending commit.
Then, we only want to be advertised when the pending phase is going to be higher
than the default new commit phase.
So the format will change from
$ hg summary
parent: 2:ab91dfabc5ad
foo
parent: 3:24f1031ad244 tip
bar
branch: default
commit: 1 modified, 1 unknown, 1 unresolved (merge)
update: (current)
phases: 1 secret (secret)
to
parent: 2:ab91dfabc5ad
foo
parent: 3:24f1031ad244 tip
bar
branch: default
commit: 1 modified, 1 unknown, 1 unresolved (merge) (secret)
update: (current)
phases: 1 secret
The bundle2 version of obsmarkers exchange is more informative. Switching to
bundle2 by default will change the output of this tests. To reduce the noise
when switching bundle2 to the default protocol, we migrate this tests early.
This patch refactors the native computation of heads. It fixes a bug where
filtered heads in the pending index could be returned by the native code
despite their filtering.
Because bundle2 allows a more precise exchange of obsmarkers during pull, it
sends them in a different order (previously unstable because of sets.) As
a result, they are added to the repository in a different order. To stabilize
the order and ensure tests are unchanged when moving from bundle1 to bundle2 we
sort markers when exchanging them.
In the long run, the obsstore will probably not use a linear storage.
The number of draft and secret changesets are currently not summarized.
This is an important information because the number of drafts give some rough
idea of the number of outgoing changesets in typical workflows, without needing
to probe a remote repository. And a non-zero number of secrets means that
those changeset will not be pushed.
If the repository is "dirty" - some draft or secret changesets exists - then
summary will display a line like:
phases: X draft, Y secret (public)
The phase in parenthesis corresponds to the highest phase of the parents of
the working directory, i.e. the current phase.
By default, the line is not printed if the repository is "clean" - all
changesets are public - but if verbose is activated, it will display:
phases: (public)
On the other hand, nothing will be printed if quiet is in action.
A few tests have been added in test-phases.t to cover the -v and -q cases.
This avoids the following error that happened if base revision of bundle file
was hidden. bundlerevlog needs it to construct revision texts from bundle
content as revlog.revision() does.
File "mercurial/context.py", line 485, in _changeset
return self._repo.changelog.read(self.rev())
File "mercurial/changelog.py", line 319, in read
text = self.revision(node)
File "mercurial/bundlerepo.py", line 124, in revision
text = self.baserevision(iterrev)
File "mercurial/bundlerepo.py", line 160, in baserevision
return changelog.changelog.revision(self, nodeorrev)
File "mercurial/revlog.py", line 1041, in revision
node = self.node(rev)
File "mercurial/changelog.py", line 211, in node
raise error.FilteredIndexError(rev)
mercurial.error.FilteredIndexError: 1
The obsolescence markers exchange is still experimental. We (developer) need
more information about what is going on. I'm adding an experimental flag to add
display the amount of data exchanged during bundle2 exchanges.
Running the tags function filtered will lead to different results with different
filter levels. This seems too dangerous to be done blindly as 39c37a1a9e2d did.
As per fullreposet.__and__, it can omit the range check of rev. Therefore,
"null" revision is accepted automagically.
It seems this can fix many query results involving null symbol. Originally,
the simplest "(null)" query did fail if there were hidden revisions. Tests
are randomly chosen.
fullreposet mimics the behavior of localrepo, where "null" revision is not
listed but contained.
I ran into a case when adding a test where there were cryptic hg command line
errors. I eventually traced it back to 'hg id' printing debug messages before
the hash:
invalid branchheads cache (served): tip differs <hash>
This method should eliminate any other output except the node.
The issue is titled "filtered revision 'XXX' (not in 'served' subset)" and that
is the error message you sometimes get when trying to look at a file (/file or
/annotate) in hgweb. For example:
http://hg.intevation.org/mercurial/crew/file/8414f8487b33/mercurial/cmdutil.py
This happens when a parent revision for a file is hidden, thus it is
not 'served' and isn't accessible in hgweb by default. When hgweb tries to
access such changeset, it produces the error and HTTP status code 404.
Another detail is that the parents() function, that is used in multiple places
in hgweb, sometimes returned changesets that were obsoleted by the current
changeset for the file. For example, when using rebase with evolve and rebasing
a divergent changeset that introduces a file on top of current branch. Or
grafting a change and making the new grafted changeset obsolete the source
(shown in the test case). The result is the same - the obsoleted changeset was
mistakingly returned from parents(), even though it's not a parent and the only
link to the new changeset is an obsoletion marker (and rebase/graft metadata?
not sure it matters).
The problem is fixed by using introrev() instead of linkrev() for finding
parents. This prevents parents() function from returning unrelated obsolete
changesets.
The test case prepares a separate repo because (afaict) all other test cases
never reuse file names, so there are no files that were changed in multiple
changesets. So no previously available files have obsolete changesets in their
history.