As with phases, spartan theme shows a simple "obsolete: yes" on its own line
(this allows replacing "yes" with something more useful in future, like output
of obsfate* template functions). Everywhere else a new "tag" is added to the
same line that has phase, branch, etc of a changeset; in gitweb and monoblue
the element has gray background, in paper and coal the element is gray with a
dashed underline.
In spartan theme phase is shown on its own table row, because there's no single
line of "tags". Everywhere else phase is prepended to the list of "tags" of a
changeset. Its element has a purple-ish color in gitweb and monoblue, and a
dotted line under it and no color in paper and coal (as these themes are frugal
with colors).
This patch intentionally doesn't touch graph, because it needs a rewrite. I'll
get to it pretty soon and in the process will add phase and everything that's
still coming (e.g. obsolescence and instabilities).
.. feature::
hgweb now displays phases of non-public changesets
This patch puts all these changeset "tags" into one template shared everywhere
in paper and coal themes. But it should be noted that some of the templates had
different sets of tags, in some cases it was intended, in others - most likely
not.
First, what's up with all these different ways to get changeset's branch. There
are actually 3 ways to do it in hgweb, they can all be seen in this patch;
"branches", "inbranch" and "branch". They are all lists that consist of 1 or 0
items:
- "branches" has ctx.branch() if current changeset is the tip of that branch
- "inbranch" has ctx.branch() if current changeset is _not_ the tip of that
branch and the branch is not "default"
- "branch" aka "changesetbranch" has ctx.branch() if the branch is not
"default"
The majority of cases (7 vs 2 + /graph) in paper theme used only option 3,
which meant that "default" was never displayed. But other parts of the theme
disagreed with this and used option 1 and option 2 together. For example, the
default view (log) displays "default" on the branch tip (can be seen right
about now on m-s.o/repo/hg), but it disappears when you click on the commit.
Also, using option 3 alone meant that there was no way to tell if a changeset
is the tip of its branch or not (it was always assumed that it's not, see how
some css classes change from "branchname" to the correct "branchhead" in tests)
-- so the two different css styles that exist in paper just for this were
underused.
I think this patch improves the situation, even though it changes the old (even
if inconsistent) behavior. The new behavior matches that of gitweb and
monoblue.
These new colors and styles are already used in the tooltip that gets shown
when user hovers over line numbers on annotate page. The old styles, replaced
in this patch, look completely unrelated to gitweb or any other hgweb theme.
Building on top of the new URL query string arguments to control
whitespace settings for annotate, this commit adds HTML checkboxes
reflecting the values of these arguments to the paper and gitweb
themes.
The actual diff settings are now exported to the templating layer.
The HTML templates add these as data-* attributes so they are
accessible to the DOM.
A new <form> with various <input> elements is added. The <form>
is initially hidden via CSS. A shared JavaScript function (which
runs after the <form> has been rendered but before the annotate
HTML (because annotate HTML could take a while to load and we want
the form to render quickly) takes care of setting the checked state
of each box from the data-* attributes. It also registers an event
handler to modify the URL and refresh the page whenever the checkbox
state is changed.
I'm using the URLSearchParams interface to perform URL manipulation.
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams tells
me this may not be supported on older web browsers. Yes, apparently
the web API didn't have a standard API to parse and format query
strings until recently. Hence the check for the presence of this
feature in the JavaScript. If the browser doesn't support the
feature, the <form> will remain hidden and behavior will like it
currently is. We could polyfill this feature or implement our own
query string parsing. But I'm lazy and this could be done as a
follow-up if people miss it.
We could certainly expand this feature to support more diff options
(such as lines of context). That's why the potentially reusable code
is stored in a reusable place. It is also certainly possible to
add diff controls to other pages that display diffs. But since
Mozillians are making noise about controlling which revisions
annotate shows, I figured I'd start there.
.. feature::
Control whitespace settings for annotation on hgweb
/annotate URLs on hgweb now accept query string arguments to
influence how whitespace changes impact results.
The arguments "ignorews," "ignorewsamount," "ignorewseol," and
"ignoreblanklines" now have the same meaning as their [annotate]
config section counterparts. Any provided setting overrides the
server default.
HTML checkboxes have been added to the paper and gitweb themes
to expose current whitespace settings and to easily modify the
current view.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D850
Without this, multiple spaces or tabs in the commit message aren't
preserved and things like tables don't align properly.
As part of adding the CSS rule, we had to cuddle the content
with the <div> to not introduce leading and trailing whitespace.
The "addbreaks" filter was also removed because it would insert
an additional newline, effectively double spacing content.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D113
This changeset attempts to solve two issues with the "followlines" UI in
hgweb. First the "followlines" action is currently not easily discoverable
(one has to hover on a line for some time, wait for the invite message to
appear and then perform some action). Second, it gets in the way of natural
line selection, especially in filerevision view.
This changeset introduces an additional markup element (a <button
class="btn-followlines">) alongside each content line of the view. This button
now holds events for line selection that were previously plugged onto content
lines directly. Consequently, there's no more action on content lines, hence
restoring the "natural line selection" behavior (solving the second problem).
These buttons are hidden by default and get displayed upon hover of content
lines; then upon hover of a button itself, a text inviting followlines section
shows up. This solves the first problem (discoverability) as we now have a
clear visual element indicating that "some action could be perform" (i.e. a
button) and that is self-documented.
In followlines.js, all event listeners are now attached to these <button>
elements. The custom "floating tooltip" element is dropped as <button>
elements are now self-documented through a "title" attribute that changes
depending on preceding actions (selection started or not, in particular).
The new <button> element is inserted in followlines.js script (thus only
visible if JavaScript is activated); it contains a "+" and "-" with a
"diff-semantics" style; upon hover, it scales up.
To find the parent element under which to insert the <button> we either rely
on the "data-selectabletag" attribute (which defines the HTML tag of children
of class="sourcelines" element e.g. <span> for filerevision view and <tr> for
annotate view) or use a child of the latter elements if we find an element
with class="followlines-btn-parent" (useful for annotate view, for which we
have to find the <td> in which to insert the <button>).
On noticeable change in CSS concerns the "margin-left" of span:before
pseudo-elements in filelog view that has been increased a bit in order to
leave space for the new button to appear between line number column and
line content one.
Also note the "z-index" addition for "annotate-info" box so that the latter
appears on top of new buttons (instead of getting hidden).
In some respect, the UI similar to line commenting feature that is implemented
in popular code hosting site like GitHub, BitBucket or Kallithea.
Add the followlines.js script and corresponding parameters as data attribute
on <tbody class="sourcelines"> element.
Extend CSS rules so that they also match the DOM structure of annotate view.
As previously, only address paper and gitweb styles (other styles do not have
followlines at all).
c0593b622180 changed the styling of the "page_nav" CSS class to use
flexbox to separate elements within the <div>. I didn't realize that
this class was used outside of the links in the header. So this
resulted in incorrectly formatting links in the footer of various
pages. Fix that by introducing a new CSS class that preserves the
old CSS behavior.
gitweb was missing the hint hover box. So that was added.
Also, the positioning of the form was absolute and it didn't
vertically align on all pages. The element has been moved inline
with the navigation links (which now are contained in a div) and
flexbox is used to obtain sane alignment of the navigation links
and search form. For those new to flexbox,
"justify-content: space-between" basically says to maximize space
elements. You can use it to easily get left and right justified
containers without having to worry about width, floating, etc.
"align-items: center" centers all items in a cross-axis. I've
literally wasted hours trying to figure out both these problems
before flexbox. Flexbox is amazing.
Flexbox has been supported by Chrome and Firefox for a few years.
But it is only supported by IE 11. I'm willing to wager that
people using this either won't be using IE or will be using IE 11.
So I'm willing to be a bit aggressive in adopting flexbox because
it makes CSS alignment so much easier.
AFAICT this was mostly a bunch of copy pasta. The only variation is
some pages defined a "value" attribute. The "query" variable will
just be empty on pages that don't accept it. So let's consolidate
the template and remove the redundancy.
Mostly copy CSS rules from style-paper.css into style-gitweb.css. The only
modification is addition of !important on "background-color" rule for
"pre.sourcelines > span.followlines-selected" selector as the background color
is otherwise overriden by "pre.sourcelines.stripes > :nth-child(4n+4)" rule.
Commit messages often contain vertically aligned text. The default
paper style already uses monospace fonts for rendering commit messages.
And, AFAICT, a number of Git servers also render commit messages
with monospace. It seems like the reasonable thing to do.
This commit converts all instances of the full commit message
in the gitweb style to render with monospace.
All the hgweb templates include mercurial.js in their header. All
the hgweb templates have the same <script> boilerplate to run
process_dates(). This patch factors that function call into
mercurial.js as part of a DOMContentLoaded event listener.
Add white-space: nowrap to td.annotate to avoid wrapping div.annotate-info
into next line if there is revision number in the same cell, as it is hard to
mouse over div.annotate-info if it's wrapped into next line.
The link is embedded into a div with class="annotate-info" that only shows up
upon hover of the annotate column. To avoid duplicate hover-overs (this new
one and the one coming from link's title), drop "title" attribute from a
element and put it in the annotate-info element.
* Distinguish the /annotate/<revision>/<file>#<linenumber> link when it would
lead to the current page (i.e. <revision> is the current revision) (style it
gray and undecorated). This indicates more clearly that this is a "dead-end"
in blame navigation.
* Display lines changed in current revision in green.
chg currently does not support hg serve -d. It has a quick path testing if the
command is hg serve -d and fallbacks to hg if so. But the test only works if
"serve" is the first argument since the test wants to avoid false positives
(for example, "-r serve" is different).
This patch reorders "hg server" commands in tests, making them chg friendly.
Due to how the line links now reside outside of the source lines, hovering over
line numbers doesn't count as hovering over the appropriate source line. It can
be worked around by using a "+" css selector. However, it's necessary to
reorder the elements and put <a> before <span> (which is actually quite
logical). It works without further css tweaks because <a> is already
absolute-positioned and so the order doesn't matter visually.
When users configure the default foreground or background color to
non-default (black on white) values, several hgweb styles lack
contrast for headers and table row items. This patch fixes that by
ensuring that where either foreground or background colors are
specified, both are specified.
Empty lines in file view could produce an inexplicable margin before the next
line (most noticeable in browsers on webkit/blink engine). That was making
empty lines seem taller than the rest.
Instead of using default vertical align, let's set it to 'top'.
This issue is actually present in paper, and only recently got into gitweb
(0609781075c1) and monoblue (b7a7757577fb). There's a bit more to it in paper,
so that will be dealt with in a future patch.
Recipe to see live: preferably using a webkit/blink browser, such as chromium,
browse a file with empty lines, e.g. https://selenic.com/hg/file/3.5/README#l8
Selecting a block of text that includes empty lines will reveal white "breaks"
in the selection. Highlighted line (#l8) also shows such a break below itself.
This is adapted from a46863946982 and 8d7bff75072d.
It also fixes issue4790 in gitweb; tab characters now have meaningful width on
the modified pages (file view, file diff, changeset).
It's possible to have a branch/tag/bookmark with all kinds of special
characters, such as {}/\!?. While not very conveniently, symbolic revisions
with such characters work from command line if user correctly quotes the
characters. These characters also work in hgweb, when they are properly
encoded, with one exception: '/' (forward slash, urlencoded as '%2F'), which
was getting decoded before hgweb could parse it as a part of PATH_INFO.
Because of that, hgweb was seeing it as any other forward slash, that is, as
just another url parts separator.
For example, if user wanted to see the content of dir/file at bookmark
'feature/eggs', url could be: '/file/feature%2Feggs/dir/file'. But hgweb tried
to find a revision 'feature' and get contents of 'eggs/dir/file'.
To fix this, let's assume forward slashes are doubly-urlencoded (%252F), so
CGI/WSGI server decodes it into %2F. Then we can decode %2F in the revision
part of the url into an actual '/' character.
Making hgweb produce such urls will be done in the next 2 patches.
Unlike other styles, paper and coal had only one link to current revision: in
the sidebar. Since those links now use symbolic revisions after 4b263b99440b,
it's nice to have a link that allows going from /rev/tip to /rev/<tip hash>,
for instance. Let's make the node hash in the page header that new link.
Let's make paper (and coal, since it borrows so much from paper) templates use
symbolic revision in navigation links.
The majority of links (log, filelog, annotate, etc) still use node hashes.
Some pages don't have permanent links to current node hash (so it's not very
easy to go from /rev/tip to /rev/<tip hash>), this will be addressed in future
patches.
$TESTDIR is added to the path, so this is superfluous. Also,
inconsistent use of quotes means we might have broken on tests with
paths containing spaces.
A style name should not contain "/", "\", "." and "..". Otherwise, templates
could be loaded from outside of the specified templates directory by invalid
?style= parameter. hgweb should not allow such requests.
This change means subdir/name is also rejected.
Some templates in paper style use <tbody> elements inside <table> to assign a
class to "body" part of that table (in this case, to make rows striped). The
problem is that the <tbody> is preceded by <tr> element, which browsers
understand as an implicit start of table body, so the following exlicit <tbody>
will actually be "nested", which is not valid.
Since that first <tr> contains table headers, wrapping it in <thead> is both
semantically correct and follows the advertised XHTML 1.1 doctype.
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.
Make hgweb.refresh() also look at phaseroots file (in addition to 00changelog.i
file) and reload the repo when os.stat returns different mtime or size than
cached, signifying the file was modified.
This way if user changes phase of a changeset (secret <-> draft), there's no
need to restart hg serve to see the change.
Traditionally, the way to specify a command for hgweb was to use url query
arguments (e.g. "?cmd=batch"). If the command is unknown to hgweb, it gives an
error (e.g. "400 no such method: badcmd").
But there's also another way to specify a command: as a url path fragment (e.g.
"/graph"). Before, hgweb was made forgiving (looks like it was made in
cd356f4efd91) and user could put any unknown command in the url. If hgweb
couldn't understand it, it would just silently fall back to the default
command, which depends on the actual style (e.g. for paper it's shortlog, for
monoblue it's summary). This was inconsistent and was breaking some tools that
rely on http status codes (as noted in the issue4071). So this patch changes
that behavior to the more consistent one, i.e. hgweb will now return "400 no
such method: badcmd".
So if some tool was relying on having an invalid command return http status
code 200 and also have some information, then it will stop working. That is, if
somebody typed foobar when they really meant shortlog (and the user was lucky
enough to choose a style where the default command is shortlog too), that fact
will now be revealed.
Code-wise, the changed if block is only relevant when there's no "?cmd" query
parameter (i.e. only when command is specified as a url path fragment), and
looks like the removed else branch was there only for falling back to default
command. With that removed, the rest of the code works as expected: it looks at
the command, and if it's not known, raises a proper ErrorResponse exception
with an appropriate message.
Evidently, there were no tests that required the old behavior. But, frankly, I
don't know any way to tell if anyone actually exploited such forgiving behavior
in some in-house tool.
Fixes HTTP protocol violation introduced in e4a5f5db7028. 'hg serve' would show
a stacktrace when loading pages that not had been modified.
There was test coverage for this, but the wrong response headers wasn't shown
and thus not detected.