Summary:
Like D9323267, hg tests commonly reinvent common aliases to render the DAG, and they often differ very slightly. This makes adding a test require more boilerplate, and reading a test in a foreign new area slightly more overhead.
Let's standardize these to reduce the copypasta.
It's necessary to define this as a shell function instead of an hgrc alias to prevent tests that list aliases from printing it. Plus that enforces a nice separation of test/stdlib logic.
Bookmarks and branches are easy enough to add since they're empty if not used. A good number added `{phase}` -- I renamed this to `tglogp`.
Reviewed By: quark-zju
Differential Revision: D9347072
fbshipit-source-id: 6aac7de3e65d2295a7ebecd2ab30901709af3ff1
Make 'hg outgoing' respect "paths.default:pushurl" in addition to
"paths.default-push".
'hg outgoing' has always meant "what will happen if I run 'hg push'?" and it's
still documented that way:
Show changesets not found in the specified destination repository or the
default push location. These are the changesets that would be pushed if a
push was requested.
If the user uses the now-deprecated "paths.default-push" path, it continues to
work that way. However, as described at
https://bz.mercurial-scm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5365, it doesn't behave the same
with "paths.default:pushurl".
Why does it matter? Similar to the bugzilla reporter, I have a read-only mirror
of a non-Mercurial repository:
upstream -> imported mirror -> user clone
^-----------------------/
Users push directly to upstream, and that content is then imported into the
mirror. However, those repositories are not the same; it's possible that the
mirroring has either broken completely, or an import process is running and not
yet complete. In those cases, 'hg outgoing' will list changesets that have
already been pushed.
Mozilla's desired behavior described in bug 5365 can be accomplished through
other means (e.g. 'hg outgoing default'), preserving the consistency and
meaning of 'hg outgoing'.
# skip-blame because this was mechanically rewritten the following script. I
ran it on both *.t and *.py, but none of the *.py changes were proper. All *.t
ones appear to be, and they run without addition failures on both Windows and
Linux.
import argparse
import os
import re
ap = argparse.ArgumentParser()
ap.add_argument('path', nargs='+')
opts = ap.parse_args()
globre = re.compile(r'^(.*) \(glob\)(.*)$')
for p in opts.path:
tmp = p + '.tmp'
with open(p, 'rb') as src, open(tmp, 'wb') as dst:
for line in src:
m = globre.match(line)
if not m or '$LOCALIP' in line or '*' in line:
dst.write(line)
continue
if '?' in line[:-3] or ('?' in line[:-3] and line[-3:] != '(?)'):
dst.write(line)
continue
dst.write(m.group(1) + m.group(2) + '\n')
os.unlink(p)
os.rename(tmp, p)
Default-push has been deprecated in favour of default:pushurl. But "hg clone" still
inserts this in every hgrc file it creates. This patch updates the message by replacing
default-push with default:pushurl and also makes the necessary changes to test files.
This just copies the same local sample hgrc, except it sets the
default path to the repo it was cloned from.
This is cut-and-paste from the local sample hgrc, but I think it's
acceptable, since the two pieces of code are right next to each other
and they're small. There is danger of them going out of synch, but it
would complicate the code too much to get rid of this C&P.
I also add ui as an import to hg.py, but with demandimport, this
should not be a noticeable performance hit.
Some users clone from a server before ever running 'hg config --edit',
so they don't see our helpful template for things like enabling the
username. Attempt to give them some helpful guidance.
Many tests didn't change back from subdirectories at the end of the tests ...
and they don't have to. The missing 'cd ..' could always be added when another
test case is added to the test file.
This change do that tests (99.5%) consistently end up in $TESTDIR where they
started, thus making it simpler to extend them or move them around.
Globbing is usually used for filenames, so on windows it is reasonable and very
convenient that glob patterns accepts '\' or '/' when the pattern specifies
'/'.
hg log -r 'outgoing(..)' ignored #branch in some cases.
This patch fixes it.
The cases where it misbehaved are now covered by the added
test-revset-outgoing.t