This message frequently caused confusion. "unsynced" is not a well established
user-facing concept in Mercurial and the message was not very specific or
helpful.
Instead, show a message like:
remote has heads on branch 'default' that are not known locally: 6c0482d977a3
This message will also (when relevant) be shown before aborting on "push
creates new remote head".
A similar (but actually very different) message was addressed in cbd5a12a601a.
This note (which actually is a warning) frequently caused confusion.
"unsynced" is not a well established user-facing concept in Mercurial and the
message was not very specific or helpful.
Instead, show a messages like:
remote has heads on branch 'default' that are not known locally: 6c0482d977a3
and show it before aborting on "push creates new remote head". This will also
give more of a hint in the case where the branch has been closed remotely and
'hg heads' thus not would show any new heads after pulling.
A similar (but actually very different) message was addressed in cbd5a12a601a.
MSYS replaces C:/... in arguments with C;... as it interprets the C:/ as a
colon separated POSIX path list. The colon is replaced with ; (path separator
on Windows) according to
http://www.mingw.org/wiki/Posix_path_conversion
So we must not replace \ with / for neither $TESTTMP nor $TESTDIR, but we
have to keep replacing \ with / for the Popen4 call of function hghave. If we
don't do the latter, test-run-tests.t will fail with
$ python run-tests.py --local test-run-tests.t
--- C:\Users\adi\hgrepos\hg-main\tests\test-run-tests.t
+++ C:\Users\adi\hgrepos\hg-main\tests\test-run-tests.t.err
@@ -70,6 +70,7 @@
tested
#else
$ echo skipped
+ skipped
#endif
#if false
An additional tweak in test-ssh.t is needed that globs away an encoded path,
as it can't be translated back to $TESTTMP, because the backslashes in the
output have been already encoded as %5C.
This patch makes test-ssh.t pass in MSYS on Windows.
Allows you to restrict a ssh key to have read-only access to a set of
repos by passing the --read-only flag to hg-ssh.
This is useful in an environment where the number of unix users you
can or are willing to create is limited. In such an environment,
multiple users or applications will share a single unix account. Some
of those applications will likely need read-only access to the
repository. This change makes it possible to grant them such access
without requiring that they use a separate unix account.
Currently we have the following return codes if nothing is found:
commit incoming outgoing pull push
intended 1 1 1 1 1
documented 1 1 1 0 1
actual 1 1 1 0 1
This makes pull agree with the rest of the table and makes it easy to
detect "nothing was pulled" in scripts.
Currently we have the following return codes if nothing is found:
commit incoming outgoing pull push
intended 1 1 1 1 1
documented 1 1 1 0 1
actual 1 1 1 0 0
This fixes the lower-right entry.
The Mercurial ssh protocol is defined as if it was ssh-ing to a shell account on
an ordinary ssh server, and where hg was available in $PATH and it executed
the command "hg -R REPOPATH serve --stdio".
The Mercurial ssh client can in most cases just pass REPOPATH to the shell, but
if it contains unsafe characters the client will have to quote it so the shell
will pass the right -R value to hg. Correct quoting of repopaths was introduced
in 7bec00a7d7a6 and tweaked in c3194121de6c.
hg-ssh doesn't create the command via a shell and used a simple parser instead.
It worked fine for simple paths without any quoting, but if any kind of quoting
was used it failed to parse the command like the shell would do it.
This makes hg-ssh behave more like a normal shell with hg in the path would do.
Adds a new discovery method based on repeatedly sampling the still
undecided subset of the local node graph to determine the set of nodes
common to both the client and the server.
For small differences between client and server, it uses about the same
or slightly fewer roundtrips than the old tree-based discovery. For
larger differences, it typically reduces the number of roundtrips
drastically (from 150 to 4, for instance).
The old discovery code now lives in treediscovery.py, the new code is
in setdiscovery.py.
Still missing is a hook for extensions to contribute nodes to the
initial sample. For instance, Augie's remotebranches could contribute
the last known state of the server's heads.
Credits for the actual sampler and computing common heads instead of
bases go to Benoit Boissinot.
We don't support passwords in ssh URLs, and neither do some versions
of Python's urllib. Since we don't actually care much here, punt with
a glob in the test.
This is a simple patch to make hg push/hg outgoing print their remote target
path even if the operation fails. I'm not sure if the original behavior was by
design.
This patch also changes one test to reflect the changed behaviour.