The old code did not understand the difference between the first line of the summary,
and a random line in the summary that happened to include a #, or a
random line in the changes that happened to include it.
7c3798ffdc0c is an example where it fails
For reasons I can't explain (but likely have something to do with a
combination of __import__ inferring default values for arguments and
the demand importer mechanism further assuming defaults), the demand
importer isn't playing well with IPython. Without this patch, we get
a failure "ValueError: Attempted relative import in non-package" when
attempting to import "IPython." The stack has numerous demandimport
calls on it and adding "IPython" to the exclude list in demandimport
isn't enough to make the problem go away, which means the issue is
likely somewhere in the bowells of IPython. It's easier to just disable
the demand importer when importing the debugger.
The goal of commit summary keywords is to help us sort, categorize,
and filter our voluminous commits for our release notes in a way
that's helpful and meaningful to end users. Lately, there have been a
huge number of "keywords" that are neither words nor particularly key.
This patch tries to discourage that by narrowing the allowed
characters to alphanumeric. In particular, it doesn't allow "."
(method, function names, and file extensions) and "/" (filenames). It
also gives a short reminder of what a keyword ought to be.
This addition to the inno installer script means that the windows uninstaller
registry key “DisplayVersion" is set to the application version number and
will show in Add/Remove Programs.
This makes the changes in 68b7b759ebff and 71a3703364df available on Windows.
I'm not setup to make the installer, so someone with experience in this area
should probably give it a look. In looking around to try to figure out how to
build the installer, it looks like the Makefile may need an update to $DOCFILES.
My version of docker (1.8.3) have a different formating for 'docker version'
that broke the build script. We make the version matching more generic in to
work with both version.
A subsequent patch will refactor _chunks() and the calculation of the
offset will no longer occur in that function. Prepare by returning the
offset from _chunkraw().
There are make targets for building mercurial packages for various
distributions using docker. One of the preparation steps before building is to
create inside the docker image a user with the same uid/gid as the current user
on the host system, so that the resulting files have appropriate
ownership/permissions.
It's possible to run `make docker-<distro>` as a user with uid or gid that is
already present in a vanilla docker container of that distibution. For example,
issue4657 is about failing to build fedora packages as a user with uid=999 and
gid=999 because these ids are already used in fedora, and groupadd fails.
useradd would fail too, if the flow ever got to it (and there was a user with
such uid already).
A straightforward (maybe too much) way to fix this is to allow non-unique uid
and gid for the new user and group that get created inside the image. I'm not
sure of the implications of this, but marmoute encouraged me to try and send
this patch for stable.
Previously the -rc in our rc tags got dropped, meaning that those
packages looked newer to the packaging system than the later release
build. This rectifies the issue, though some damage may already have
been done on 3.6-rc builds.
I'm mostly cargo-culting the RPM version format - there don't appear
to be rules for RPM about how to handle this. Hopefully an RPM
enthusiast can fix up what I've done as a followup.
We want to support editors with parameters, eg EDITOR="vim -O" or whatever.
So remove the quotes from around $ED and assume that the editor variable is
properly escaped already.
Now, 'dirstate.write(tr)' delays writing in-memory changes out, if a
transaction is running.
This may cause treating this revision as "the first bad one" at
bisecting in some cases using external hook process inside transaction
scope, because some external hooks and editor process are still
invoked without HG_PENDING and pending changes aren't visible to them.
'dirstate.write()' callers below in localrepo.py explicitly use 'None'
as 'tr', because they can assume that no transaction is running:
- just before starting transaction
- at closing transaction, or
- at unlocking wlock
This fix adds a caret to the start of the regex looking for merge markers. This
avoids the issue arises when you've real merge conflicts in a file that tests
for the existance of merge markers in test output. Editmerge will not open on
the fake/tested merge markers because they'll be indented in.
This adds a test extension to check that the non-normal set contains the
expected entries. It wraps several methods of the dirstate to check that
the non-normal set has the correct values before and after the call. The
extension lives in contrib so that paranoid developers can easily
enable it to make sure that the non-normal set is consistent across more
complex operations than the included tests.
Whenever check-code finds something wrong, the diffs it
generated were fairly hard to read.
The problem is that check-code before this change
would list files that were white listed using
no- check- code but without a glob marker.
Whereas, the test-check-code.t expected output has
no-che?k-code (glob) in order to avoid having itself
flagged as a file to skip.
Thus, in addition to any lines relating to things you
did wrong, all of the white-listed files are listed as
changed.
There is no reason for things to be this painful.
This change makes the output from check-code.py match
the expected output in test-check-code.t
This came up before, but the tests in check-code.py don't find -U (only -u)
and they don't work when the diff is inside a shell function. This fixes
the offending tests and beefs up check-code.py.
Not having this caused warnings on Windows:
mercurial/pure/osutil.py:12: stdlib import follows local import: os
mercurial/pure/osutil.py:13: stdlib import follows local import: socket
mercurial/pure/osutil.py:14: stdlib import follows local import: stat
mercurial/pure/osutil.py:15: stdlib import follows local import: sys
We have a convention of using -c|-m|FILE elsewhere for reading from
revlogs. Use it for `hg perfrevlog`.
While I was here, I also added a docstring to document what this
command does, as "perfrevlog" is ambiguous.
As part of investigating performance improvements to revlog reading,
I needed a mechanism to measure every part of revlog reading so I knew
where time was spent and how effective optimizations were.
This patch implements a perf command for benchmarking the various
stages of reading a single revlog revision.
When executed against a manifest revision at the end of a 30,000+
long delta chain in mozilla-central, the command demonstrates that
~80% of time is spent in zlib decompression.
The old code only partially cleared the caches. Now that we have a
comprehensive method for wiping all caches, let's call it.
This appears to introduce a marginal regression in `hg perfmanifest`
on mozilla-central. This is good because the new result is more
accurate since caches aren't being used.