This will ensure new extensions are consistent and `hg help -e` has a
consistent output.
I have to add a new group since the normal "pypats" will be filtered by
"pyfilters", which will remove comments and docstrings.
We want to use the `f_fstypename` field to get the filesystem type. Test it
directly. The new macro HAVE_BSD_STATFS implys the old HAVE_SYS_MOUNT_H and
HAVE_SYS_PARAM_H. So the latter ones are removed.
After 6a86fe38f1f6, with 'shell' being (mostly) set to False, invoking `more` no
longer worked. Instead, a warning was printed and the pager was disabled.
Invoking `more.com` works. Since a user may have configured 'pager.pager=more',
do this substitution at the end. Surprisingly, `more` does allow for arguments,
so those are preserved. This also allows `more` to work in MSYS.
Setting 'shell=False' runs the executable via CreateProcess(), which has rather
wonky rules for resolving an executable without an extension [1]. Resolving to
*.com is not among them. Since 'shell=True' yields a cryptic error for a bad
$PAGER, and a *.exe program will work without specifying the extension, sticking
with current 'shell=False' seems like the right thing to do. I don't think
there are any other *.com pagers out there, so this one special case seems OK.
If somebody wants to do something crazy that requires cmd.exe, I was able to get
normal paged output with 'pager.pager="cmd.exe /c more"'. I assume you can
replace `more` with *.bat, *.vbs or various other creatures listed in $PATHEXT.
[1] https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms682425(v=vs.85).aspx
The number of dashes under it needs to match exactly for it to be
rendered as a heading. Without this change, the dashes end up on the
same line as "commands", and "hg help config.commands" does not work.
Empty changelist descriptions are valid in Perforce. If we encounter one of
them we are currently running into an IndexError. In case of empty commit
messages set the commit message to **empty changelist description**, which
follows Perforce terminology.
When the config is set to true, status output becomes relative to the
working directory. This has bugged me since I started using hg and it
turns it is sillily simple to support it (unless I missed something,
of course).
We could also add a --relative flag, but I would personally always
want that on, and I haven't heard any use for having it sometimes on,
so this patch only lets you enable it via config.
We only have commands.{update,rebase}.requiredest so far. We should
clearly ignore those two if HGPLAIN is in effect, and it seems like we
should ignore any future config that will be added in [commands] since
that is about changing the behavior of commands.
Thanks to Yuya for suggesting to centralize the code in ui.py.
While at it, remove the unnecessary False values passed to
ui.configbool() for the aforementioned config options.
The checkheads function is long and complex, extract that logic in a subfunction
is win in itself. As the comment in the code says, this postprocessing is
currently very basic and either misbehave or fails to detect valid push in many
cases. My deeper motive for this extraction is to be make it easier to provide
extensive testing of this case and strategy to cover them. Final test and logic
will makes it to core once done.
We just need a hash table {fctx.data(): fctx} which doesn't keep fctx.data()
in memory. Let's simply use hash(fctx.data()) to put data out from memory,
and manage collided fctx objects by list.
This isn't significantly faster than using sha1, but is more correct as we
know SHA-1 collision attack is getting practical.
Benchmark with 50k added/removed files, on tmpfs:
$ hg addremove --dry-run --time -q
previous: real 12.420 secs (user 11.120+0.000 sys 1.280+0.000)
this patch: real 12.350 secs (user 11.210+0.000 sys 1.140+0.000)
Instead, build a set of files to be removed and recreate addedfiles
only if necessary.
Benchmark with 50k added/removed files, on tmpfs:
$ hg addremove --dry-run --time -q
original: real 16.550 secs (user 15.000+0.000 sys 1.540+0.000)
previous: real 16.730 secs (user 15.280+0.000 sys 1.440+0.000)
this patch: real 16.070 secs (user 14.470+0.000 sys 1.580+0.000)
Previously, `hg bundle zstd` on a non-generaldelta repo would
attempt to use a v1 bundle. This would fail because zstd is not
supported on v1 bundles.
This patch changes the behavior to automatically use a v2 bundle
when the user explicitly requests a bundlespec that is a compression
engine not supported on v1. If the bundlespec is <engine>-v1, it is
still explicitly rejected because that request cannot be fulfilled.
Version 1 bundles only support a fixed set of compression engines.
Before this change, we would accept any compression engine for v1
bundles, even those that may not work on v1. This could lead to
an error.
We define a fixed set of compression engines known to work with v1
bundles and we add checking to ensure a newer engine (like zstd)
won't work with v1 bundles.
I also took the liberty of adding test coverage for unknown compression
names because I noticed we didn't have coverage of it before.
This should catch the bug fixed by "worker: ignore meaningless exit status
indication returned by os.waitpid()."
Before, worker.py was untested since test repositories are relatively small.
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.
Before this patch, worker implementation assumes that os.waitpid()
with os.WNOHANG returns '(0, 0)' for still running child process. This
is explicitly specified as below in Python API document.
os.WNOHANG
The option for waitpid() to return immediately if no child
process status is available immediately. The function returns
(0, 0) in this case.
On the other hand, POSIX specification doesn't define the "stat_loc"
value returned by waitpid() with WNOHANG for such child process.
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/waitpid.html
CPython implementation for os.waitpid() on POSIX doesn't take any care
of this gap, and this may cause unexpected "exit status indication"
even on POSIX conformance platform.
For example, os.waitpid() with os.WNOHANG returns non-zero "exit
status indication" on FreeBSD. This implies os.kill() with own pid or
sys.exit() with non-zero exit code, even if no child process fails.
To ignore meaningless exit status indication returned by os.waitpid(),
this patch skips subsequent steps forcibly, if os.waitpid() returns 0
as pid.
This patch also arranges examination of 'p' value for readability.
FYI, there are some issues below about this behavior reported for
CPython.
https://bugs.python.org/issue21791https://bugs.python.org/issue27808
Previously Abort raised during 'getbundle' call poorly reported (HTTP-500 for
http, some scary messages for ssh). Abort error have been properly reported for
"push" for a long time, there is not reason to be different for 'getbundle'. We
properly catch such error and report them back the best way available. For
bundle, we issue a valid bundle2 reply (as expected by the client) with an
'error:abort' part. With bundle1 we do as best as we can depending of http or
ssh.
bundle2 allow the server to report error explicitly. This was initially
implemented for push but there is not reason to not use it for pull too. This
changeset add logic similar to the one in 'unbundle' to the
client side of 'getbundle'. That logic make sure the error is properly reported
as "remote". This will allow the server side of getbundle to send clean "Abort"
message in the next changeset.
Changeset a0966f529e1b introduced a config option to have the server deny pull
using bundle1. The original protocol has not really been design to allow that
kind of error reporting so some hack was used. It turned the hack only works on
HTTP and that ssh server hangs forever when this is used. After further
digging, there is no way to report the error in a unified way. Using `ooberror`
freeze ssh and raising 'Abort' makes HTTP return a HTTP-500 without further
details. So with sadness we implement a version that dispatch according to the
protocol used.
Now the error is properly reported, but we still have ungraceful abort after
that. The protocol do not allow anything better to happen using bundle1.
We are about to add a test for ssh pull/cloning being denied because of bundle1
usage. For this, it is cleaner to not operate from the clone using http. So we
update the test beforehand for clarity. This is more churns that what I'm happy
to see on stable, but the rests of the series is worth it in my opinion.
Changeset a0966f529e1b introduced a config option to have the server deny push
using bundle1. The original protocol has not really be design to allow such kind
of error reporting so some hack was used. It turned the hack only works on HTTP
and that ssh wire peer hangs forever when the same hack is used. After further
digging, there is no way to report the error in a unified way. Using 'ooberror'
freeze ssh and raising 'Abort' makes HTTP return a HTTP500 without further
details. So with sadness we implement a version that dispatch according to the
protocol used.
We also add a test for pushing over ssh to make sure we won't regress in the
future. That test show that the hint is missing, this is another bug fixed in
the next changeset.
The remote hint message was ignored when reporting the remote error and
passed to the local generic abort error. I think I might initially have
tried to avoid reimplementing logic controlling the hint display depending of
the verbosity level. However, first, there does not seems to have such verbosity
related logic and second the resulting was wrong as the primary error and the
hint were split apart. We now properly print the hint as remote output.
This patch also makes some expected output lines in tests glob-ed for
persistence of them.
BTW, files below aren't yet changed in 2017, but this patch also
updates copyright of them, because:
- mercurial/help/hg.1.txt
almost all of "man hg" output comes from online help of hg
command, and is already changed in 2017
- mercurial/help/hgignore.5.txt
- mercurial/help/hgrc.5
"copyright 2005-201X Matt Mackall" in them mentions about
copyright of Mercurial itself
This patch replaces domain of mercurial-devel ML address by
mercurial-scm.org for "Report-Msgid-Bugs-To" property of each *.po
files.
This avoids releasing 4.1.1 with invalid "Report-Msgid-Bugs-To"
in *.mo file, if corresponded *.po file isn't msgmerge-ed with recent
hg.pot by translator.
These *.po files aren't covered by check-code.py pattern newly added
in subsequent patch, because it ignores them.
This patch also adds new check-code.py pattern to detect invalid usage
of "mercurial@selenic.com".
Change for test-convert-tla.t is tested, but similar change for almost
same test-convert-baz.t isn't yet tested actually, because I couldn't
find out the way to get "GNU Arch baz client".
AFAIK, buildbot skips test-convert-baz.t, too. Does anybody have
appropriate environment for testing?