This seems a bit hacky, but works well. There should be no reason that
static-http repo had to load dirstate.
Initially I tried to proxy os.stat() call through vfs so that statichttpvfs
could hook it, but there wasn't a good error value which the statichttpvfs
could return to get around the util.filestat issue.
The short options "-c" and "-C" may be confusing for a novice reading the
documentation. Let's try to be more explicit, also mentioning the equivalent
long options ("--check" and "--clean") in the comments.
Currently, specifying both a line-range pattern and a bare file pattern
results in an AND operation whereas we probably want an OR so that bare file
patterns are like a line-range pattern with all lines specified.
So, until this works as expected, we disable this.
When a file is binary patch.trydiff() would yield None for 'hunkrange'. Handle
this case in the hunksfilter() callback.
Add tests with and without diff.git option as binary handling differs
depending on this option's value.
Effect-flags config was in flight while the previous evolve config renaming
was written. Now that both landed, gather effect-flags in
experimental.evolution like the others evolve-related configurations.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1197
Yuja's comment on the original obsfate about how we would translate obsfate
and the recent discussions about exposing users to new concepts and names lead
have led me to think that 'obsfate' should be treated as internal jargon. End-
users should not be aware of obsfate, so we replace 'obsfate' by 'obsolete' in
changeset_printer.
It will be easier to understand for end-users, easier to translate and closer
to the original Evolve obsfate output.
I'm aware it's extremely late in the cycle but I think it's an UX improvement
for the end-users.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1189
An empty entry in the revlog may happen for two reasons:
- when the file is empty, and the revlog stores a snapshot;
- when there is a merge and both parents were identical.
`hg debugindex -m | awk '$3=="0"{print}' | wc -l` gives 1917 of such entries
in my clone of pypy, and 113 on my clone of mercurial.
These empty revision may be located at the end of a sparse chain, and in some
special cases may lead to read relatively large amounts of data for nothing.
chgserver.py is also checking the config and will get:
devel-warn: accessing unregistered config item:
'commands.show.aliasprefix' at:
mercurial/chgserver.py:109
if the config is not registered.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1178
When `$CHGHG` is set, `$HG` is ignored by the chg client. Removing it from
chg's sensitive environment list would avoid starting up servers
unnecessarily when `$CHGHG` is the same while `$HG` is different.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1177
fsmonitor can significantly speed up operations on large working
directories. But fsmonitor isn't enabled by default, so naive users
may not realize there is a potential to make Mercurial faster.
This commit introduces a warning to working directory updates when
fsmonitor could be used.
The following conditions must be met:
* Working directory is previously empty
* New working directory adds >= N files (currently 50,000)
* Running on Linux or MacOS
* fsmonitor not enabled
* Warning not disabled via config override
Because of the empty working directory restriction, most users will
only see this warning during `hg clone` (assuming very few users
actually do an `hg up null`).
The addition of a warning may be considered a BC change. However, clone
has printed warnings before. Until recently, Mercurial printed a warning
with the server's certificate fingerprint when it wasn't explicitly
trusted for example. The warning goes to stderr. So it shouldn't
interfere with scripts parsing meaningful output.
The OS restriction was on the advice of Facebook engineers, who only
feel confident with watchman's stability on the supported platforms.
.. feature::
Print warning when fsmonitor isn't being used on a large repository
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D894
Since the ui objects can be created with the 'load' class method, it
is possible to lose the exit handlers information from the old ui instance. For
example, running 'test-bad-extension.t' leads to this situation where chg
creates a new ui instance which does not copy the exit handlers from the
earlier ui instance. For exit handlers, which are special cases anyways, it
probably makes sense to have a global state of the handlers. This would ensure
that the exit handlers registered once are definitely executed at the end of
the request.
Test Plan:
Ran all the tests without '--chg' option. This also fixes the
'test-bad-extension.t' with the '--chg' option.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1166
Splitting at too small gaps might not be worthwhile. With this changeset,
we stop considering splitting on too small gaps. The threshold is configurable.
We arbitrarily pick 256K as a default value because it seems "okay".
Further testing on various repositories and setups will be needed to tune it.
The option name is 'experimental.sparse-read.min-gap-size`, and replaces
`experimental.sparse-read.min-block-size` which is not used any more.
The previous recursive approach was trying to optimise each read slice to have
a good density. It had the tendency to over-optimize smaller slices while
leaving larger hole in others.
The new approach focuses on improving the combined density of all the reads,
instead of the individual slices. It slices at the largest gaps first, as they
reduce the total amount of read data the most efficiently.
Another benefit of this approach is that we iterate over the delta chain only
once, reducing the overhead of slicing long delta chains.
On the repository we use for tests, the new approach shows similar or faster
performance than the current default linear full read.
The repository contains about 450,000 revisions with many concurrent
topological branches. Tests have been run on two versions of the repository:
one built with the current delta constraint, and the other with an unlimited
delta span (using 'experimental.maxdeltachainspan=0')
Below are timings for building 1% of all the revision in the manifest log using
'hg perfrevlogrevisions -m'. Times are given in seconds. They include the new
couple of follow-up changeset in this series.
delta-span standard unlimited
linear-read 922s 632s
sparse-read 814s 566s
I think there's a slight hole here in that a subrepo could be shared, removed
from .hgsub, and then it's not part of context.substate (so not iterated over).
But the push command has the same hole IIRC, and I think removing a subrepo is
an edge case.
The import hack is a copy/paste of subrepo.subrepo().
This will be used to setup unsharing subrepos. Usually cmdutil is used for
this purpose. But the implementation needs hg.copystore(), and the hg module
already imports cmdutil.
Before this changesets, a literal '.*:foo$' config would match a registered
'.*:foo$' generic. This is wrong since generic should be matched through
regular exception only. This changeset fixes this problem.
Thanks for to Yuya Nishihara for spotting the issue.
When the list of dates is empty, `min` and `max` would raises a ValueError.
Protect against this case by checking that the date list is not empty.
I didn't add a test because I couldn't find a reproducing test case.
Grouping all evolution related-config under the experimental.evolution
namespace would helps the future migration outside [experimental].
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1155
Stabilization config items were never part of a release, remove them now that
we cleaned up the evolution related configuration.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1154
Update the evolution helpers function to support both old-style configuration and
new-style configuration:
experimental.evolution=all is renamed into experimental.evolution=true
experimental.evolution=createmarkers is renamed into
experimental.evolution.createmarkers=true
experimental.evolution=allowunstable is renamed into
experimental.evolution.allowunstable=true
experimental.evolution=exchange is renamed into
experimental.evolution.exchange=true
We choose to not rename individual config options; keeping the same names
would easy the transition for users but it's something that could be easily
done in the future.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1147
We want to split the evolution-related configuration and back-out the renaming
from evolution.* to stabilization.*.
First invert the configuration and aliases, so next changesets will be
cleaner.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1146
# skip-blame because parsers.c is mechanically rewritten by
clang-format with no semantic change.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1170
This gives clang-format the right notion about formatting these struct
initializers, therefore allowing us to automatically format several
additional files.
# skip-blame because this is just a content-free comment addition
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1169
We want a slightly weird format here so that it's easier to read, but
in order to preserve that we need to disable clang-format.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1168
Now that all known options are declared, we setup a warning to make sure it will
stay this way.
We disable the warning in two tests checking other behavior with random options.
We add an experimental -L/--line-range option to 'hg log' taking file patterns
along with a line range using the (new) FILE,FROMLINE-TOLINE syntax where FILE
may be a pattern (matching exactly one file). The resulting history is similar
to what the "followlines" revset except that, if --patch is specified,
only diff hunks within specified line range are shown.
Basically, this brings the CLI on par with what currently only exists in hgweb
through line selection in "file" and "annotate" views resulting in a file log
with filtered patch to only display followed line range.
The option may be specified multiple times and can be combined with --rev and
regular file patterns to further restrict revisions. Usage of this option
requires --follow; revisions are shown in descending order and renames are
followed. Only the --graph option is currently not supported.
The UI is the result of a consensus from review feedback at:
https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2017-October/106749.html
The implementation spreads between commands.log() and cmdutil module.
In commands.log(), the main loop may now use a "hunksfilter" factory (similar
to "filematcher") that, for a given "rev", produces a filtering function
for diff hunks for a given file context object.
The logic to build revisions from -L/--line-range options lives in
cmdutil.getloglinerangerevs() which produces "revs", "filematcher" and
"hunksfilter" information. Revisions obtained by following files' line range
are filtered if they do not match the revset specified by --rev option. If
regular FILE arguments are passed along with -L options, both filematchers are
combined into a new matcher.
.. feature::
Add an experimental -L/--line-range FILE,FROMLINE-TOLINE option to 'hg log'
command to follow the history of files by line range. In combination with
-p/--patch option, only diff hunks within specified line range will be
displayed. Feedback, especially on UX aspects, is welcome.
We add a 'hunksfilterfn' keyword argument in all functions of the call
stack from changeset_printer.show() to patch.diff(). This is a callable
that will be used to filter out hunks by line range and will be used in
the "-L/--line-range" option of "hg log" command introduced in the
following changesets.
We'll need the same logic in forthcoming changeset to handle --line-range
option in 'hg log' command.
The function lives in scmutil.py (rather than util.py) as it uses match and
pathutil modules.
Use the verbosity aware template keyword introduced earlier. It has the nice
property of being verbosity dependent but in order to customize the obsfate
part, users will need to replace the lobsfate definition from default mapfile
with the one using template functions (by copying the one from test-obsmarker-
template.t for example).
As it's a more advanced use-case, I'm more inclined to have the same code for
the {obsfate} keyword, in the changeset printer and in the default mapfile for
consistency.
But, the definition in default mapfile could be replaced with one based on
template filter to obsfate output customization if it is a big need for users.
Having an obsfate by default in log will be useful for users to understand why
they have obsolete and unstable changesets. Obsfate will only be shown for
obsolete changesets, which only happens if people opt-in to experimental feature.
But when obsolete changeset are visible, it is very useful to understand where
they are. Having it in log could be sufficient for most people, so they don't
have to learn a new command (like obslog which is itself useful in case of
divergences).
For example, when pulling and working directory parent become obsolete:
$ hg pull
...
working directory parent is obsolete! (f936c1697205)
This message comes from the Evolve extension.
Obsfate would comes handy:
$ hg log -G
o changeset: 2:6f91013c5136
| tag: tip
| parent: 0:4ef7b558f3ec
| user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
| date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200
| summary: A
|
| @ changeset: 1:f936c1697205
|/ user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
| date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200
| obsfate: rewritten using amend as 2:6f91013c5136
| summary: -A
|
o changeset: 0:feb4dd822b8c
user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
date: Tue Oct 09 16:00:00 2017 +0200
summary: ROOT
And once we update, we don't have an obsolete changeset in the log anymore so
we don't show obsfate anymore, most users won't see obsfate often if they
don't have obsolete changeset often:
@ changeset: 2:6f91013c5136
| tag: tip
| parent: 0:4ef7b558f3ec
| user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
| date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200
| summary: A
|
o changeset: 0:feb4dd822b8c
user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
date: Tue Oct 09 16:00:00 2017 +0200
summary: ROOT