If you're shipping prerelease or rc packages using Munki, you'll
eventually discover that Munki's version comparison logic is not as
good as pip's. In theory we should be able to fix Munki, but it seems
entirely reasonable to produce version strings that sort reasonably
under these conditions. Since the requried logic not brief, add a new
script and some tests of that logic.
A followup change will wire this into the Makefile.
Most test scripts use "hg" to interact with a temporary test repository.
However a few tests also want to run hg commands to interact with the local
repository containing the mercurial source code. Notably, many of the
test-check-* tests want to check local files and commit messages.
These tests were previously using the version of hg being tested to query the
source repository. However, this will fail if the source repository requires
extensions or other settings not supported by the version of mercurial being
tested. The source repository was typically initially cloned using the system
hg installation, so we should use the system hg installation to query it.
There was already a helpers-testrepo.sh script designed to help cope with
different requirements for the source repository versus the test repositories.
However, it only handled the evolve extension. This new behavior works with
any extensions that are different between the system installation and the test
installation.
The contrib/zsh_completion file itself says to name it _hg.
With a name like `hg`, if the user has a line like `autoload ${^fpath}/*(N-.:t)`
in their zshrc, it will create a shell function named `hg` that will hide the
actual hg command and make hg unusable.
Separately from that though, the underscore prefix makes it actually work. The
zsh man page states:
The convention for autoloaded functions used in completion is that they
start with an underscore
This does not seem to just be a "convention", though. With the ill-advised line
removed from my zshrc and the file named
`/usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions/hg` (without the underscore), these
completions did not seem to get loaded and the ones from the zsh installation
were loaded instead. If I renamed them to be
`/usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions/_hg`, however, they were loaded.
I manually tested the above statement by starting a new zsh instance with the
file in `/usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions` with the following names:
- As `hg`, `which _hg_labels` did not show anything
- As `_hg`, `which _hg_labels` showed the expected function.
To quote `man 1 pkgbuild`:
--filter filter-expression
By default, --root will include the entire contents of the
given root-path in the package payload, except for any .svn
or CVS directories, and any .DS_Store files. You can override
these default filters by specifying one or more --filter
options. Each filter-expression is an re_format(7)
``extended'' expression: any path in the root which matches
any of the given expressions will be excluded from the pack-
age payload. (Note that specifying even one --filter inhibits
the default filters, so you must respecify the default fil-
ters if you still want them to be used.)
It turns out the default filter these days *also* includes .git and
.hg. Notice how that filter expression is a regular expression? That
(presumably unintentionally) prevents a file named "chg" or "_hg" from
getting included in the distribution. Many many thanks to spectral@
for trying to include a _hg file which led us to figure this bug out.
Bug filed with Apple for this as rdar://problem/32437369, mentioning
both the gap in documentation and the wrong defaults.
The zsh location appears to be on the default $fpath for zsh. bash, on
the other hand, appears to have no default location for completion
scripts, so we follow the lead of Apple's Git distribution and select
a semi-arbitrary place in /usr/local for the file.
Instead of using bdist_mpkg, we use the modern Apple-provided tools to
build an OS X Installer package directly. This has several advantages:
* Avoids bdist_mpkg which seems to be barely maintained and is hard to
use.
* Creates a single unified .pkg instead of a .mpkg.
* The package we produce is in the modern, single-file format instead of
a directory bundle that we have to zip up for download.
In addition, this way of building the package now correctly:
* Installs the manpages, bringing the `make osx`-generated package in
line with the official Mac packages we publish on the website.
* Installs files with the correct permissions instead of encoding the
UID of the user who happened to build the package.
Thanks to Augie for updating the test expectations.