Summary:
The bug:
This happens because `repo['']` resolves to a `wctx`. This might be undesirable
in its own right, but before we fix that, we can work it around here.
Reviewed By: singhsrb
Differential Revision: D10261261
fbshipit-source-id: 8cb0e96762ffba24030f9e6bae8b0d0c108e3938
Summary: This is a first step towards making `obshelve` a real `shelve`.
Reviewed By: singhsrb
Differential Revision: D10261262
fbshipit-source-id: 7dccfbd7958cdf674c33c8ead73dcd279cebade6
Summary:
Update most locations in the hg extensions to use `repo.localvfs` instead of
`repo.vfs`.
Reviewed By: quark-zju
Differential Revision: D9699153
fbshipit-source-id: 48d5f9678caa4961063db30477d6fbe0d6f34347
Summary: Mostly empty lines removed and added. A few bugfixes on excessive line splitting.
Reviewed By: quark-zju
Differential Revision: D8199128
fbshipit-source-id: 90c1616061bfd7cfbba0b75f03f89683340374d5
Summary:
Turned on the auto formatter. Ran `arc lint --apply-patches --take BLACK **/*.py`.
Then run `arc lint` again so some other autofixers like spellchecker etc. looked
at the code base. Manually accept the changes whenever they make sense, or use
a workaround (ex. changing "dict()" to "dict constructor") where autofix is false
positive. Disabled linters on files that are hard (i18n/polib.py) to fix, or less
interesting to fix (hgsubversion tests), or cannot be fixed without breaking
OSS build (FBPYTHON4).
Conflicted linters (test-check-module-imports.t, part of test-check-code.t,
test-check-pyflakes.t) are removed or disabled.
Duplicated linters (test-check-pyflakes.t, test-check-pylint.t) are removed.
An issue of the auto-formatter is lines are no longer guarnateed to be <= 80
chars. But that seems less important comparing with the benefit auto-formatter
provides.
As we're here, also remove test-check-py3-compat.t, as it is currently broken
if `PYTHON3=/bin/python3` is set.
Reviewed By: wez, phillco, simpkins, pkaush, singhsrb
Differential Revision: D8173629
fbshipit-source-id: 90e248ae0c5e6eaadbe25520a6ee42d32005621b
Summary:
This check is useful and detects real errors (ex. fbconduit). Unfortunately
`arc lint` will run it with both py2 and py3 so a lot of py2 builtins will
still be warned.
I didn't find a clean way to disable py3 check. So this diff tries to fix them.
For `xrange`, the change was done by a script:
```
import sys
import redbaron
headertypes = {'comment', 'endl', 'from_import', 'import', 'string',
'assignment', 'atomtrailers'}
xrangefix = '''try:
xrange(0)
except NameError:
xrange = range
'''
def isxrange(x):
try:
return x[0].value == 'xrange'
except Exception:
return False
def main(argv):
for i, path in enumerate(argv):
print('(%d/%d) scanning %s' % (i + 1, len(argv), path))
content = open(path).read()
try:
red = redbaron.RedBaron(content)
except Exception:
print(' warning: failed to parse')
continue
hasxrange = red.find('atomtrailersnode', value=isxrange)
hasxrangefix = 'xrange = range' in content
if hasxrangefix or not hasxrange:
print(' no need to change')
continue
# find a place to insert the compatibility statement
changed = False
for node in red:
if node.type in headertypes:
continue
# node.insert_before is an easier API, but it has bugs changing
# other "finally" and "except" positions. So do the insert
# manually.
# # node.insert_before(xrangefix)
line = node.absolute_bounding_box.top_left.line - 1
lines = content.splitlines(1)
content = ''.join(lines[:line]) + xrangefix + ''.join(lines[line:])
changed = True
break
if changed:
# "content" is faster than "red.dumps()"
open(path, 'w').write(content)
print(' updated')
if __name__ == "__main__":
sys.exit(main(sys.argv[1:]))
```
For other py2 builtins that do not have a py3 equivalent, some `# noqa`
were added as a workaround for now.
Reviewed By: DurhamG
Differential Revision: D6934535
fbshipit-source-id: 546b62830af144bc8b46788d2e0fd00496838939
As part of getting rid of all the permutations of changegroup creation, let's
remove changegroupsubset and call makechangegroup instead. This moves the
responsibility of creating the outgoing set to the caller, but that seems like a
relatively reasonable unit of functionality for the caller to have to care about
(i.e. what commits should be bundled).
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D665
Update the dirstate functions so that the caller supplies the full backup
filename rather than just a prefix and suffix.
The localrepo code was already hard-coding the fact that the backup name must
be (exactly prefix + "dirstate" + suffix): it relied on this in _journalfiles()
and undofiles(). Making the caller responsible for specifying the full backup
name removes the need for the localrepo code to assume that dirstate._filename
is always "dirstate".
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D68
This is one step towards removing a bunch of "if isinstance(gen,
unbundle20)" by treating bundle1 and bundle2 more similarly.
The name may sounds ironic for a method in the bundle2 module, but I
didn't think it was worth it yet to create a new 'bundle' module that
depends on the 'bundle2' module. Besides, we'll inline the method
again later.
Previously, there is a 100 changes limit per name (bookmark or named
branch). And the user will get "too many shelved changes named %s" when they
are trying to shelve the 101th change. I hit that error message today.
This limit was introduced by the shelve extension since the beginning.
The function generating the names was called "gennames", under
"getshelvename".
There is another "gennames" under "backupfilename":
def backupfilename(self):
def gennames(base):
yield base
base, ext = base.rsplit('.', 1)
for i in itertools.count(1):
yield '%s-%d.%s' % (base, i, ext)
"itertools.count" is an endless counter.
Since the other "gennames" generates unlimited number of names, and the
changeset introducing the limit (49d4919d21) does not say why the limit
is useful. It seems safe to just remove the limit.
The format "%02d" was kept intentionally so existing shelved changes won't
break.
The goal is to get rid of the debugcommands -> commands dependency.
Since globalopts is the property of the commands, it's kept in the commands
module.
cmdutil.command wasn't a member of the registrar framework only for a
historical reason. Let's make that happen. This patch keeps cmdutil.command
as an alias for extension compatibility.
Currently shelvestate uses line ordering to differentiate fields. This
makes it hard for extensions to wrap shelve, since if two alternative
versions of code add a new line, correct merging is going to be problematic.
simplekeyvaluefile was introduced fot this purpose specifically.
After this patch:
- shelve will always write a simplekeyvaluefile
- unshelve will check the first line of the file for a version, and if the
version is 1, will read it in a position-based way, if the version is 2,
will read it in a key-value way
As discussed with Yuya previously, this will be able to handle old-style
shelvedstate files, but old Mercurial versions will fail on the attempt to
read shelvedstate file of version 2 with a self-explanatory message:
'abort: this version of shelve is incompatible with the version used
in this repo'
This is a preparatory patch which separates file reading from the
minimal validation we have (like turning version into int and
checking that this version is supported). The purpose of this patch
is to be able to read statefile form simplekeyvaluefile, which is
implemented in the following patch.
This adds an explicit active-bookmark-handling logic
to shelve. Traditional shelve handles it by transaction aborts,
but it is a bit ugly and having an explicit functionality
seems better.
Since we are introducing obs-based shelve, we are no longer
stripping temporary nodes, we are obsoleting them. Therefore
it looks like stipnodes would be a misleading name, while
prune has a connotaion of "strip but with obsolescense", so
nodestoprune seems like a good rename.
Obsolescense-based shelve only needs metadata stored in .hg/shelved
and if feels that this metadata should be stored in a
simplekeyvaluefile format for potential extensibility purposes.
I want to avoid storing it in an unstructured text file where
order of lines determines their semantical meanings (as now
happens in .hg/shelvedstate. .hg/rebasestate and I suspect other
state files as well).
Not included in this series, I have ~30 commits, doubling test-shelve.t
in size and testing almost every tested shelve usecase for obs-shelve.
Here's the series for the curious now: http://pastebin.com/tGJKx0vM
I would like to send it to the mailing list and get accepted as well,
but:
1. it's big, so should I send like 6 patches a time or so?
2. instead of having a commit per test case, it more like
a commit per some amount of copy-pasted code. I tried to keep
it meaningful and named commits somewhat properly, but it is
far from this list standards IMO. Any advice on how to get it
in without turning it into a 100 commits and spending many
days writing descriptions?
3. it makes test-shelve.t run for twice as long (and it is already
a slow test). Newest test-shelve.r runs for ~1 minute.
Now that the 'vfs' classes moved in their own module, lets use the new module
directly. We update code iteratively to help with possible bisect needs in the
future.
This makes using shelve/unshelve more consistent because
shelving can be done using name option and unshelving as
well. Author of the idea of this improvement and solution is
joshgold.
This patch makes it possible to unshelve while having missing files
in your repo as long as shelved changes don't touch those missing files.
It also makes error message better otherwise.
Before this patch, there was a single way to see multiple shelves using
`--patch --list` which show all the shelves. Doing `--patch s1 s2` returns an
error. This patch allows to show multiple shelves using `--patch` and `--stat`.
Currently if our branch name contains '\' or starts with '.', shelve chooses
an illegal shelve name. This behaviour is not good as it itself is choosing
something which it won't accept further. We can raise errors if user passes
a name which is illegal.
After this patch, if '\' is contained in branch name or bookmark name, it will
be replaced by '_' while choosing a shelve name and if they starts with '.',
the first '.' is replaced by '_'.
We are using 'name + ".patch"' pattern throughout the shelve code to
identify the existence of a shelve with a particular name. In two
cases however we use 'name + ".hg"' instead. This commit makes
'patch' be used in all places and "emphasizes" it by moving
'patch' to live in a constant. Also, this allows to extract file
name without extension like this:
f[:-(1 + len(patchextension))]
instead of:
f[:-6]
which is good IMO.
This is a first patch from this initial "obsshelve" series. This
series does not include tests, although locally I have all of
test-shelve.t ported to test obs-shelve as well. I will send tests
later as a separate series.
Currently if user runs 'hg unshelve --keep' and merge conflicts
occur, the information about --keep provided by user is lost and
shelf is deleted after 'hg unshelve --continue'. This is obviously
not desired, so this patch fixes it.
Finishing unshelve involves two steps now:
- stripping a changelog
- aborting a transaction
Obs-based shelve will not require these things, so isolating this logic
into a separate function where the normal/obs-shelve branching is
going to be implemented seems to be like a nice idea.
Behavior-wise this change moves 'unshelvecleanup' from being between
changelog stripping and transaction abortion to being after them.
I don't think this has any negative effects.
Rebasing restored shelved commit onto the right destination is done
differently in traditional and obs-based unshelve:
- for traditional, we just rebase it
- for obs-based, we need to check whether a successor of
the restored commit already exists in the destination (this
might happen when unshelving twice on the same destination)
This is the reason why this piece of logic should be in its own
function: to not have excessive complexity in the main function.
Committing working copy changes before rebasing a shelved commit
on top of them is an independent piece of behavior, which fits
into its own function.
Similar to the previous series, this and a couple of following
patches are for unshelve refactoring.
I've caught multiple extensions in the wild lying about being
'internal', so it's time to move the goalposts on people. Goalpost
moving will continue until third party extensions stop trying to
defeat the system.