Extension to plug into a Watchman daemon, speeding up hg status calls by
relying on OS events to tell us what files have changed.
Originally developed at https://bitbucket.org/facebook/hgwatchman
In preparation for the filesystem monitor extension, include the pywatchman
library. The fbmonitor extension relies on this library to communicate with
the Watchman service. The library is BSD licensed and is taken from
https://github.com/facebook/watchman/tree/master/python.
This package has not been updated to mercurial code standards.
Consider the following use case. User has a set of commits he wants to rebase
onto some destination. Some of the commits in the set are already rebased
and their new versions are now among the ancestors of destination. Traditional
rebase behavior would make the rebase and effectively try to apply older
versions of these commits on top of newer versions, like this:
a` --> b --> a`
(where both 'a`' and 'a``' are rebased versions of 'a')
This is not desired since 'b' might have made changes to 'a`' which can now
result in merge conflicts. We can avoid these merge conflicts since we know
that 'a``' is an older version of 'a`', so we don't even need to put it on top
of 'b'. Rebaseskipobsolete allows us to do exactly that.
Another undesired effect of a pure rebase is that now 'a`' and 'a``' are both
successors to 'a' which is a divergence. We don't want that and not rebasing
'a' the second time allows to avoid it.
This was not enabled by default initially because we wanted to have some more
experience with it. After months of painless usages in multiple places, we are
confident enough to turn it on my default.
When shelve is used by another extension that doesn't
provide all necessary values in opts shelve raises
KeyError exception. This patch fixes this by getting
values from opts dictionary with get method.
This patch consists of changes below (these can't be applied
separately).
- replace revset.extpredicate by registrar.revsetpredicate in
extensions
- remove setup() on an instance named as revsetpredicate in
uisetup()/extsetup() of each extensions
registrar.revsetpredicate doesn't have setup() API.
- put new entry for revsetpredicate into extraloaders in dispatch
This causes implicit loading predicate functions at loading
extension.
This loading mechanism requires that an extension has an instance
named as revsetpredicate, and this is reason why
largefiles/__init__.py is also changed in this patch.
Before this patch, test-revset.t tests that all decorated revset
predicates are loaded by explicit setup() at once ("all or nothing").
Now, test-revset.t tests that any revset predicate isn't loaded at
failure of loading extension, because loading itself is executed by
dispatch and it can't be controlled on extension side.
Instead of the mapping hack introduced by d4686e0c15c9, this patch changes the
way how a label symbol is evaluated. This is still hackish, but should be more
predictable in that it doesn't depend on the known color effects.
This change is intended to eliminate the reference to color._effects so that
color.templatelabel() can be merged with templater.label().
validate will load the repo config and check if the server has up-to-date
config to continue serve the client. In case it does not, the server will
send instructions to the client about what to do next, including to retry
with a different address or to unlink an outdated socket file to stop an
old server.
Since label() should return a string (or a thunk to be evaluated to a string),
this change is okay. This helps porting to evalstring() helper. See the next
patch for details.
Previously we use full path and the symlink may point to outside (unsafe)
world if the directory is moved. This patch fixes it by only linking to
basename of the target. Therefore the symbolic link and socket files will
always stay in the same directory.
There are various ways to use histedit such that an item in
the list of things to perform will not result in a change
relative to the previous repository state.
When that happens, histedit does not keep the commit/message.
This changes the note to try to explain to the user that it
will not be present in their history.
In order to detect a hash change from a request handler, chg must know the
original hashstate. It also needs the base server address to figure out
redirect addresses.
It was necessary to go through progress.uisetup() to set up the progressui
wrapper. Since the progress extension has got into the core, progress.assume-tty
is no longer necessary.
Before this patch, chgserver will use the address provided by the client. The
new design is one server per confighash. This patch appends "-$confighash" to
the address the client provides. To maintain the compatibility and make sure
the client can connect to the server, a symbolic link is created at the original
address pointing to the new address.
The address is intentionally mangled at the server, instead of being pre-
calculated by some other process (eg. a previous server). In this way, we can
avoid file system race conditions.
Before this patch, deprecated options below are used in synopsis of
command help, even though they aren't listed up as available options
by default. These might confuse readers.
- -n (no-op, now) of strip
- -a/--active of branches
- -f/--force of merge
cf6cc5344afa added 'ignoresub' argument to ui.configitems(), but zeroconf
wrapper wasn't updated. It caused the following crash:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "bin/hg", line 43, in <module>
mercurial.dispatch.run()
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 54, in run
sys.exit((dispatch(request(sys.argv[1:])) or 0) & 255)
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 120, in dispatch
ret = _runcatch(req)
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 191, in _runcatch
return _dispatch(req)
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 924, in _dispatch
cmdpats, cmdoptions)
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 681, in runcommand
ret = _runcommand(ui, options, cmd, d)
File "lib/python/mercurial/extensions.py", line 195, in closure
return func(*(args + a), **kw)
File "lib/python/hgext/zeroconf/__init__.py", line 180, in cleanupafterdispatch
return orig(ui, options, cmd, cmdfunc)
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 1055, in _runcommand
return checkargs()
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 1015, in checkargs
return cmdfunc()
File "lib/python/mercurial/dispatch.py", line 921, in <lambda>
d = lambda: util.checksignature(func)(ui, *args, **cmdoptions)
File "lib/python/mercurial/util.py", line 991, in check
return func(*args, **kwargs)
File "lib/python/mercurial/commands.py", line 5405, in paths
pathitems = sorted(ui.paths.iteritems())
File "lib/python/mercurial/util.py", line 723, in __get__
result = self.func(obj)
File "lib/python/mercurial/ui.py", line 619, in paths
return paths(self)
File "lib/python/mercurial/ui.py", line 1099, in __init__
for name, loc in ui.configitems('paths', ignoresub=True):
File "lib/python/mercurial/extensions.py", line 195, in closure
return func(*(args + a), **kw)
TypeError: configitems() got an unexpected keyword argument 'ignoresub'
We have no test coverage for zeroconf, so I've added a minimal test that
could reproduce this problem.