Some character sets, cp932 (known as Shift-JIS for Japanese) for
example, use 0x41('A') - 0x5A('Z') and 0x61('a') - 0x7A('z') as second
or later character.
In such character set, case collision checking recognizes different
files as CASEFOLDED same file, if filenames are treated as byte
sequence.
win32mbcs extension is not appropriate to handle this problem, because
this problem can occur on other than Windows platform only if
problematic character set is used.
Callers of util.checkcase() use known ASCII filenames as last
component of path, and string.lower() is not applied to directory part
of path. So, util.checkcase() is kept intact, even though it applies
string.lower() to filenames.
The most appropriate context is not always clearly defined. The obvious cases:
For working directory commands, we use None
For commands (eg annotate) with single revs, we use that revision
The less obvious cases:
For commands (eg status, diff) with a pair of revs, we use the second revision
For commands that take a range (like log), we use None
The idea is being able to associate a file with a property, and watch
that file stat info for modifications when we decide it's important for it to
be up-to-date. Once it changes, we recreate the object.
On filesystems that can't uniquely identify a file, we always recreate.
As a consequence, localrepo.invalidate() will become much less expensive in the
case where nothing changed on-disk.
The Mercurial 1.9 release is moving a lot of stuff around anyway and we are
already moving path_auditor from util.py to scmutil.py for that release.
So this seems like a good opportunity to do such a rename. It also strengthens
the current project policy to avoid underbars in names.
The two new methods are useful for quickly opening a file for reading
or writing. Unlike 'opener(...).read()', they ensure they the file is
immediately closed without relying on CPython reference counting.
On a case-sensitive file system, files can be added with names that differ
only in case (a "case collision"). This would cause an error on case-insensitive
filesystems. A warning or error is now given for such collisions, depending on
the value of ui.portablefilenames ('warn', 'abort', or 'ignore'):
$ touch file File
$ hg add --config ui.portablefilenames=abort File
abort: possible case-folding collision for File
$ hg add File
warning: possible case-folding collision for File
On POSIX platforms, the 'add', 'addremove', 'copy' and 'rename' commands now
warn if a file has a name that can't be checked out on Windows.
Example:
$ hg add con.xml
warning: filename contains 'con', which is reserved on Windows: 'con.xml'
$ hg status
A con.xml
The file is added despite the warning.
The warning is ON by default. It can be suppressed by setting the config option
'portablefilenames' in section 'ui' to 'ignore' or 'false':
$ hg --config ui.portablefilenames=ignore add con.xml
$ hg sta
A con.xml
If ui.portablefilenames is set to 'abort', then the command is aborted:
$ hg --config ui.portablefilenames=abort add con.xml
abort: filename contains 'con', which is reserved on Windows: 'con.xml'
On Windows, the ui.portablefilenames config setting is irrelevant and the
command is always aborted if a problematic filename is found.