Summary:
The helper could be used in individual tests to enable chg if chg exists.
This allows us to have more precise control on what tests to use chg instead
of using a global flag in run-tests.py.
This makes certain tests containing many hg commands much faster. For example,
`test-revset.t` took 99 seconds before:
% ./run-tests.py test-revset.t --time
.
# Ran 1 tests, 0 skipped, 0 failed.
# Producing time report
start end cuser csys real Test
0.000 99.990 86.410 12.000 99.990 test-revset.t
And 10 seconds after:
% ./run-tests.py test-revset.t --time
.
# Ran 1 tests, 0 skipped, 0 failed.
# Producing time report
start end cuser csys real Test
0.000 10.080 0.380 0.130 10.080 test-revset.t
Also enable it for some other tests. Note the whitelist is not complete. We
probably want to whitelist more tests in the future.
The feature could be opted out by deleting `contrib/chg/chg`.
Reviewed By: phillco
Differential Revision: D6767036
fbshipit-source-id: 8220cf408aa198d5d8e2ca5127ca60e2070d3444
Summary: Also change the internal API so it no longer accepts the "heads" argument.
Reviewed By: ryanmce
Differential Revision: D6745865
fbshipit-source-id: 368742be49b192f7630421003552d0a10eb0b76d
If the conversion doesn't change the hash, and the cset is public in the source,
it should be public in the destination. (This can happen if file remapping is
done that doesn't affect the initial commits.) This also propagates the secret
phase from the source, regardless of the hash, because presumably the content is
what is secret. Otherwise, the destination commit stays in the draft phase.
Maybe any draft cset with an unchanged hash should be changed to public, because
it has effectively been shared, but convert pretty strongly implies throwing
away (or at least readonly archiving) the source repo.
The change in the rollback output is because the name of the outer transaction
is now 'convert', which seems more accurate. Unfortunately, the memctx won't
indicate the hash prior to committing, so the proper phase can't be applied with
the commit.
The repo is already write locked in mercurial_sink.before().
Convert will normally only process files that were changed in a source
revision, apply the filemap, and record it has a change in the target
repository. (If it ends up not really changing anything, nothing changes.)
That means that _if_ the filemap is changed before continuing an incremental
convert, the change will only kick in when the files it affects are modified in
a source revision and thus processed.
With --full, convert will make a full conversion every time and process
all files in the source repo and remove target repo files that shouldn't be
there. Filemap changes will thus kick in on the first converted revision, no
matter what is changed.
This flag should in most cases not make any difference but will make convert
significantly slower.
Other names has been considered for this feature, such as "resync", "sync",
"checkunmodified", "all" or "allfiles", but I found that they were less obvious
and required more explanation than "full" and were harder to describe
consistently.
Rollback or strip could leave a Mercurial repo with a shamap with revisions no
longer in the repository.
To ensure reliable conversions we now check that the commit actually exists and
consider it non-existing if it doesn't exist.
Mercurial tags can be local (tag -l, stored in .hg/localtags) or global (normal
tags, tracked in .hgtags) ... or extensions can add other kind of tags.
Convert would take all tags (except "tip"), not just the ones from .hgtags, and
put them into .hgtags.
Instead, convert only the global tags that come from .hgtags.
This is a simple find-and-replace strategy for matching anything in the
old description of a converted commit and, if that matched sha1 exists
in the mapping, replacing it with the new sha1.
In particular, this is helpful for descriptions that contain tags with
messages such as, "Added tag 1.0 for commit abcde1234567" which will now
be automatically converted.
Tests have been updated accordingly.
The reverse mapping was introduced in 51f9f23e6ccc to make roundtrip
conversions possible ... but it did not work when using filemap.
Roundtrips with filemaps will of course only work flawlessly if inverse
mappings are used.
Especially, if a lossy convert mapping is used in one direction, then only
linear lines of development can be converted in the other direction. With this
constraint convert will do the right thing by assuming that excluded files
haven't been changed.)
A test case with general coverage of hg-hg roundtrips with filemap is added.
(There a cases where adding records of converted revisions to the shamap in the
source repository doesn't work - especially when converting the same repo to
several other repos and back. It would arguably be better if convert only
updated the shamaps in the target repo but read shamaps from both the source
and and target repo ... but that is a different story. Making the stuff we have
work consistently is step forward no matter what.)