Summary:
This makes tests closer to production setup and removes a bunch of "saved
backup bundle to ..." messages.
With D9236657, this should not hurt server-side performance.
Unfortunately a lot tests cannot be migrated easily, mostly because revision
numbers are used. They are left with a TODO.
Reviewed By: DurhamG
Differential Revision: D9237694
fbshipit-source-id: c993fce18f07aba09f6d70964e248af8d501575a
The branch information was properly preserved in the changeset, but the
"active" branch of the working copy could be lost (the branch of the base
being used).
Histedit used to behave properly in this regard but the case was not tested
and regressed 4 years ago in c038baa4b6f0.
# skip-blame because this was mechanically rewritten the following script. I
ran it on both *.t and *.py, but none of the *.py changes were proper. All *.t
ones appear to be, and they run without addition failures on both Windows and
Linux.
import argparse
import os
import re
ap = argparse.ArgumentParser()
ap.add_argument('path', nargs='+')
opts = ap.parse_args()
globre = re.compile(r'^(.*) \(glob\)(.*)$')
for p in opts.path:
tmp = p + '.tmp'
with open(p, 'rb') as src, open(tmp, 'wb') as dst:
for line in src:
m = globre.match(line)
if not m or '$LOCALIP' in line or '*' in line:
dst.write(line)
continue
if '?' in line[:-3] or ('?' in line[:-3] and line[-3:] != '(?)'):
dst.write(line)
continue
dst.write(m.group(1) + m.group(2) + '\n')
os.unlink(p)
os.rename(tmp, p)
Upon pull or unbundle, we display a message with the range of new revisions
fetched. This revision range could readily be used after a pull to look out
what's new with 'hg log'. The algorithm takes care of filtering "obsolete"
revisions that might be present in transaction's "changes" but should not be
displayed to the end user.
This config has been around for about 2 years now. So, it can be
assumed to be stable. Therefore, I am removing the config. This also makes the
test 'test-histedit-base.t' compatible with chg.
Test Plan:
- Ran the test 'test-histedit-base.t' with and without '--chg' option.
- Ran all the other tests without '--chg' option.
- Checked the output of 'hg help histedit'.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D942
This change adjusts and documents the new behaviour of 'roll'. It now fits nicely
with the behaviour of 'commit --amend' and the 'edit' action, by discarding the
date as well as the commit message of the second commit. Previously it used the
later date, like 'fold', but this often wasn't desirable, for example, in the
common use case of using 'roll' to add forgotten changes to a changeset
(because 'hg add' was previously forgotten or not all changes were identified
while using 'hg record').
Selecting editing commits, rewording commit messages, and
selecting commits are key actions, we will prefer them more
generally in a future commit, this pulls them ahead before
that to make the diffs easier to read.
The remaining commands are left alphabetically sorted
Before we can add a 'base' action to histedit need to change verification
so that action can specify which steps of verification should run for it.
Also it's everything we need for the exec and stop actions implementation.
I thought about baking verification into each histedit action (so each
of them is responsible for verifying its constraints) but it felt wrong
because:
- every action would need to know its context (eg. the list of all other
actions)
- a lot of duplicated work will be added - each action will iterate through
all others
- the steps of the verification would need to be extracted and named anyway
in order to be reused
The verifyrules function grows too big now. I plan to refator it in one of
the next series.
Back in June we made histedit use obsolete markers to cleanup when possible.
This was rolled back as part of bb3db0db4037 (which should have only rolled back
the --abort stuff, but rolled back everything). This caused a nasty bug when
used in conjuction with the inhibit+directaccess extensions where histedit would
leave old nodes around even after they had been squashed away.
The root of the problem is that we first clean up old nodes, and then we clean
up temp nodes. In the first pass, when we obsoleted old nodes, some would become
unobsolete because they had temp nodes on top of them, thus making them stick
around even after the histedit finished.
The fix is to A) move the temp node cleanup to be before the old node cleanup
(since they are topological on top of the old nodes), and B) use obsolete
markers instead of stripping.
This new histedit command (short for "rollup") is a variant of "fold" akin to
"hg amend" for working copy: it accumulates changes without interrupting
the user and asking for an updated commit message.
This is simpler than temporary file version. There some minor test
changes since commit messages are no longer modifed. There is still
some tests using --commands with a real file.
Have histedit record the hex of the original changeset as already done by:
- graft
- commit --amend
- rebase
My main motivation for adding this is to prevent the creation of obsolescence cycle
(see issue3681).
Note that commit created during edit are not affected yet.