Before this patch, "workingctx.status" always replaces "self._status"
by the recent result, even though:
- status isn't calculated against the parent of the working directory, or
- specified "match" isn't "always" one
(status is only visible partially)
If "workingctx" object is shared between some procedures indirectly
referring "ctx._status", this incorrect caching may cause unexpected
result: for example, "ctx._status" is used via "manifest()", "files()"
and so on.
To cache "self._status" correctly at "workingctx.status", this patch
overwrites "self._status" in "workingctx._buildstatus" only when:
- status is calculated against the parent of the working directory, and
- specified "match" is "always" one
This patch can be applied (and effective) only on default branch,
because procedure around "basectx.status" is much different between
stable and default: for example, overwriting "self._status" itself is
executed not in "workingctx._buildstatus" but in
"workingctx._poststatus", on stable branch.
The full path is propagated to the original match object since this is often
used directly for printing a file name to the user. This is cleaner than
requiring each caller to join the prefix with the file name prior to calling it,
and will lead to not having to pass the prefix around separately. It is also
consistent with the bad() and abs() methods in terms of the required input. The
uipath() method now inherits this path building property.
There is no visible change in path style for rel() because it ultimately calls
util.pathto(), which returns an os.sep based path. (The previous os.path.join()
was violating the documented usage of util.pathto(), that its third parameter be
'/' separated.) The doctest needed to be normalized to '/' separators to avoid
test differences on Windows, now that a full path is returned for a short
filename.
The test changes are to drop globs that are no longer necessary when printing an
absolute file in a subrepo, as returned from match.uipath(). Previously when
os.path.join() was used to add the prefix, the absolute path to a file in a
subrepo was printed with a mix of '/' and '\'. The absolute path for a file not
in a subrepo, as returned from match.uipath(), is still purely '/' based.
This patch makes "posix.shellquote" examine the specified string and
quote it only when it may have to be quoted for safety, like as the
previous patch for "windows.shellquote".
In fact, on POSIX environment, quoting itself doesn't cause issues
like issue4463. But (almost) equivalent quoting policy can avoid
examining test result differently on POSIX and Windows (even though
showing command line with "%r" causes such examination in
"test-extdiff.t").
The last hunk for "test-extdiff.t" in this patch isn't needed for the
previous patch for "windows.shellquote", because the code path of it
is executed only "#if execbit" (= avoided on Windows).
Before this patch, "windows.shellquote" (as used as "util.shellquote")
always quotes specified strings with double quotation marks, for
external process invocation.
But some problematic applications can't work correctly, when command
line arguments are quoted: see issue4463 for detail.
On the other hand, quoting itself is needed to specify arguments
containing whitespaces and/or some special characters exactly.
This patch makes "windows.shellquote" examine the specified string and
quote it only when it may have to be quoted for safety.
Before this patch, all command line arguments for external tools are
quoted by the combination of "shlex.split" and "util.shellquote". But
this causes some problems.
- some problematic commands can't work correctly with quoted arguments
For example, 'WinMerge /r ....' is OK, but 'WinMerge "/r" ....' is
NG. See also below for detail about this problem.
https://bitbucket.org/tortoisehg/thg/issue/3978/
- quoting itself may change semantics of arguments
For example, when the environment variable CONCAT="foo bar baz':
- mydiff $CONCAT => mydiff foo bar baz (taking 3 arguments)
- mydiff "$CONCAT" => mydiff "foo bar baz" (taking only 1 argument)
For another example, single quoting (= "util.shellquote") on POSIX
environment prevents shells from expanding environment variables,
tilde, and so on:
- mydiff "$HOME" => mydiff /home/foobar
- mydiff '$HOME' => mydiff $HOME
- "shlex.split" can't handle some special characters correctly
It just splits specified command line by whitespaces.
For example, "echo foo;echo bar" is split into ["echo",
"foo;echo", "bar"].
On the other hand, if quoting itself is omitted, users can't specify
options including space characters with "--option" at runtime.
The root cause of this issue is that "shlex.split + util.shellquote"
combination loses whether users really want to quote each command line
elements or not, even though these can be quoted arbitrarily in
configurations.
To resolve this problem, this patch does:
- prevent configurations from being processed by "shlex.split" and
"util.shellquote"
only (possibly) "findexe"-ed or "findexternaltool"-ed command path
is "util.shellquote", because it may contain whitespaces.
- quote options specified by "--option" via command line at runtime
This patch also makes "dodiff()" take only one "args" argument instead
of "diffcmd" and "diffopts. It also omits applying "util.shellquote"
on "args", because "args" should be already stringified in "extdiff()"
and "mydiff()".
The last hunk for "test-extdiff.t" replaces two whitespaces by single
whitespace, because change of "' '.join()" logic causes omitting
redundant whitespaces.
Previously, revert was only possible if the '--no-backup'
switch was specified.
Now, to support backups, we explicitly go over all modified
files in the subrepo.
In the body of the loop in trydiff(), there are conditions like:
addedset or (f in modifiedset and to is None)
The second half of that expression is to account for the fact that
merge-in additions appear as additions. By instead fixing up the sets
of modified and added files to compensate for this fact, we can
simplify the body of the loop. It also fixes one case where the
addedset was checked without the additional check (the "have we
already reported a copy above?" case in the code, also see fixed test
case).
The similar condition with 'removedset' in it seems to have served no
purpose even before this change, so it could have been simplified even
before.
There is no --after for addremove, so the printing for addremove can be hoisted
out of the 'not after' check. The difference between the two remove messages
reflects the existing difference between core remove and core addremove styles
for printing the file.
There are still some pre-existing issues here. Core addremove only prints on
inexact matches or when verbose. But since the largefiles that are being
removed are passed to removelargefiles() as a pattern list, there is never an
inexact match, which would keep the largefiles from being printed at all unless
verbose is specified. Therefore, the output is a little more aggressive than
core. The addremove print style here is also inconsistent with core- it should
use matcher.uipath(f) instead of f. These can be fixed once a matcher is passed
in.
When a directory was renamed and a new untracked file was added in the
new directory and the remote directory added a file by the same name
in the old directory, the local untracked file gets overwritten, as
demonstrated by the broken test case in test-rename-dir-merge.
Fix by checking for unknown files for 'dg' actions too. Since
_checkunknownfile() currently expects the same filename in both
contexts, we need to add a new parameter for the remote filename to
it.
The pushkey operation used to be in its own wireprotocol command and (in
practice) always be lock free when running the hook. With bundle2, it happen in
a greater scheme and a hook running locking command would get stuck. We now run
such hooks after the lock release as similar hook do.
Bundle2 test are altered to ensure we are lockfree at hook running time.
This is different from latesttagdistance in that while latesttagdistance is
defined to be the length of the longest path to the latest tag,
changessincelatesttag is the number of changes contained in @ that aren't
contained in the latest tag. So, if 't' is the latest tag in the repository
below:
t
|
v
--o--o----o
\ \
..o..o..@
then latesttagdistance is 2, but changessincelatesttag is 4.
Note that changessincelatesttag is always greater than or equal to the
latesttagdistance -- that's because changessincelatesttag counts all the
changes in the longest path since the latest tag, and possibly others. This is
an important fact that we'll take advantage of in upcoming patches.
This module depends on _winreg, which is windows-only. Recent versions
of setuptools load distutils.msvc9compiler and expect it to
ImportError immediately when on non-Windows platforms, so we need to
let them do that. This breaks in an especially mystifying way, because
setuptools uses vars() on the imported module. We then throw an
exception, which vars doesn't pick up on well. For example:
In [3]: class wat(object):
...: @property
...: def __dict__(self):
...: assert False
...:
In [4]: vars(wat())
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
TypeError Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-4-2781ada5ffe6> in <module>()
----> 1 vars(wat())
TypeError: vars() argument must have __dict__ attribute
Which is similar to the problem we run into.
If an uncommitted and deleted file was forgotten, a warning would be emitted,
even though the operation was successful. See the previous patch for
'remove -A' for the exact circumstances, and details about the cause.
The bug report doesn't mention largefiles, but the given recipe doesn't fail
unless the largefiles extension is loaded. The problem only affected normal
files, whether or not any largefiles are committed, and only files that have
not been committed yet. (Files with an 'a' state are dropped from dirstate,
not marked removed.) Further, if the named normal file never existed, the
warning would be printed out twice.
The problem is that the core implementation of remove() calls repo.status(),
which eventually triggers a dirstate.walk(). When the file isn't seen in the
filesystem during the walk, the exception handling finds the file in
dirstate, so it doesn't complain. However, the largefiles implementation
called status() again with all of the original files (including the normal
ones, just dropped). This time, the exception handler doesn't find the file
in dirstate and does complain. This simply excludes the normal files from
the second repo.status() call, which the largefiles extension has no interest
is processing anyway.
By moving the conversion from the file->action dict after the bid
merge code, bid merge can be simplified a little.
A few tests are affected by this change. Where we used to iterate over
the actions first in order of the action type ('g', 'r', etc.) [1], we
now iterate in order of filename. This difference affects the order of
debug log statements.
[1] And then in the non-deterministic order of files in the manifest
dictionary (the order returned from manifest.diff()).
The log/graphlog revset was not producing stable results since it was
iterating over a dict. Now we sort before iterating to guarantee a fixed order.
This fixes some potential flakiness in the tests.
This patch makes bundrepo retract the phase boundary for new commits to 'draft'
status, which is consistent with the behavior of 'hg unbundle'. The old
behavior was for commits to appear with the same phase as their nearest
ancestor in the base repository.
This affects several classes of operation:
* Inspecting a bundle with the -B flag
* Treating a bundle file as a peer (old: everything public, new: everything draft)
* Incoming command (neither old or new behavior is sensible -- fixed in next patch)
Previously these would be considered to be relative to the current working
directory. That behavior is both undocumented and doesn't really make sense.
There are two reasonable options for how to resolve relative paths:
- relative to the repo root
- relative to the config file
Resolving these files relative to the repo root matches existing behavior with
hooks. An earlier discussion about this is available at
http://mercurial.markmail.org/thread/tvu7yhzsiywgkjzl.
Thanks to Isaac Jurado <diptongo@gmail.com> for the initial patchset that
spurred the discussion.
The test case doesn't only check the commit message, but also the
patch, which can result in confusing output like
+ Revision df6f06d17100 does not comply to commit message rules
+ ------------------------------------------------------
+ 32: adds double empty line
+
+
even when there are no double blank lines in the commit message. Drop
the "commit message" part to make it less confusing.
Merged files are considered modified at commit time even if only 1 parent
differs. In this case we must use the change context of this parent for
expansion.
The issue went unnoticed for long because it is only apparent until the next
update to the merge revision - except in test-keyword where it was always
staring us in the face.
Mercurial backout command makes a commmit by default only when the backed out
revision is the parent of working directory and doesn't commit in any other
case.
The --commit option changes behaviour of backout to make a commit whenever
possible (i.e. there is no unresolved conflicts). This behaviour seems more
intuitive to many use (especially git users migrating to hg).
This patch adds the -B/--bookmarks option to the share command added by the
share extension. All it does for now is create a marker, 'bookmarks.shared',
that will be used by future code to implement the sharing functionality.
The revset created when -f was used with a slow path (for patterns and
directories) did not actually contain any logic to enforce follow. Instead it
was depending on the passed in subset to already be limited (which was limited
to :. but not ::.). This fixes it by adding a '& ::.' to any -f log revset.
hg log -f <file> is still broken, in that it can return results that aren't
actually ancestors of the current file, but fixing that has major perf
implications, so we'll deal with it later.
When looking for untracked files that would conflict with a tracked
file in the target revision (or the remote side of a merge), we
explcitly exclude ignored files. The code was added in f1db75422e70
(merge: refactor unknown file conflict checking, 2012-02-09), but it
seems like only unknown, not ignored, files were considered since the
beginning of time.
Although ignored files are mostly build outputs and backup files, we
should still not overwrite them. Fix by simply removing the explicit
check.
We don't seem to have any tests for updating to another revision when
there are untracked files on the local side that conflict with the
those on the remote side, so let's add tests. This shows how we
overwrite untracked ignored files when updating to a revision that
tracks the file.
The state mapping also contains some magic negative values (detached
parent, ignored revision). Blindly reading the state thus lead to
unfortunate usage of the negative value as an update destination. We
now filter them out.
We do a minor alteration of the test to catch this.
Before, merging would in some cases ask "wrong" questions about
"changed/deleted" conflicts ... and even do it before the resolve phase where
they can be postponed, re"resolved" or answered in bulk operations.
Instead, check that the content of the changed file really did change.
Reading and comparing file content is expensive and should be avoided before
the resolve phase. Prompting the user is however even more expensive. Checking
the content here is thus better.
The 'f in ancestors[0]' should not be necessary but is included to be extra
safe.
Use suffix -same for cases where file changed but content is the same - that is
the case where manifestmerge doesn't detect that a file is unchanged.
(The suffix -id is already used for cases where the file didn't change - that
is the trivial case where manifestmerge detects that the file is unchanged.)
These new tests are good but the results are bad. There shouldn't be any merge
conflicts or prompts when one side didn't change.
This allow to gracefully report the failure of the bookmark push and carry on.
Before this change set. Local push would plain quit and wireprotocol would
failed in various ungraceful way.
This patch fixes a bug where hgweb would send an incomplete HTTP
response.
If an uncaught exception is raised when hgweb is processing a request,
hgweb attempts to send a generic error response and log that exception.
The server defaults to chunked transfer coding. If an uncaught exception
occurred, it was sending the error response string / chunk properly.
However, RFC 7230 Section 4.1 mandates a 0 size last chunk be sent to
indicate end of the entity body. hgweb was failing to send this last
chunk. As a result, properly written HTTP clients would assume more data
was coming and they would likely time out waiting for another chunk to
arrive.
Mercurial's own test harness was paving over the improper HTTP behavior
by not attempting to read the response body if the status code was 500.
This incorrect workaround was added in faced8f5c2af and has been removed
with this patch.