Summary:
The helper could be used in individual tests to enable chg if chg exists.
This allows us to have more precise control on what tests to use chg instead
of using a global flag in run-tests.py.
This makes certain tests containing many hg commands much faster. For example,
`test-revset.t` took 99 seconds before:
% ./run-tests.py test-revset.t --time
.
# Ran 1 tests, 0 skipped, 0 failed.
# Producing time report
start end cuser csys real Test
0.000 99.990 86.410 12.000 99.990 test-revset.t
And 10 seconds after:
% ./run-tests.py test-revset.t --time
.
# Ran 1 tests, 0 skipped, 0 failed.
# Producing time report
start end cuser csys real Test
0.000 10.080 0.380 0.130 10.080 test-revset.t
Also enable it for some other tests. Note the whitelist is not complete. We
probably want to whitelist more tests in the future.
The feature could be opted out by deleting `contrib/chg/chg`.
Reviewed By: phillco
Differential Revision: D6767036
fbshipit-source-id: 8220cf408aa198d5d8e2ca5127ca60e2070d3444
Summary: Also change the internal API so it no longer accepts the "heads" argument.
Reviewed By: ryanmce
Differential Revision: D6745865
fbshipit-source-id: 368742be49b192f7630421003552d0a10eb0b76d
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.
Revlog can now be configured to store full snapshot only. This is used on the
changelog. However, the changegroup packing was still recomputing deltas to be
sent over the wire.
We now just reuse the full snapshot directly in this case, skipping delta
computation. This provides use with a large speed up(-30%):
# perfchangegroupchangelog on mercurial
! wall 2.010326 comb 2.020000 user 2.000000 sys 0.020000 (best of 5)
! wall 1.382039 comb 1.380000 user 1.370000 sys 0.010000 (best of 8)
# perfchangegroupchangelog on pypy
! wall 5.792589 comb 5.780000 user 5.780000 sys 0.000000 (best of 3)
! wall 3.911158 comb 3.920000 user 3.900000 sys 0.020000 (best of 3)
# perfchangegroupchangelog on mozilla central
! wall 20.683727 comb 20.680000 user 20.630000 sys 0.050000 (best of 3)
! wall 14.190204 comb 14.190000 user 14.150000 sys 0.040000 (best of 3)
Many tests have to be updated because of the change in bundle content. All
theses update have been verified. Because diffing changelog was not very
valuable, the resulting bundle have similar size (often a bit smaller):
# full bundle of mozilla central
with delta: 1142740533B
without delta: 1142173300B
So this is a win all over the board.
The post-* family of hooks will not run in case a command fails (i.e.
raises an exception). This makes it inconvenient to hook into events
such as doing something in case of a failed push.
We catch all exceptions to run the failure hook. I am not sure if this
is too aggressive, but tests apparently pass.
In order to give us the freedom to change the changegroup3 format,
let's hide it behind an experimental config. Since it is required by
treemanifests, that will override the cg3 config.
Using bundle2 for exchange unlocks the usage of changegroup version 2. This
version of the changegroup held more information (delta base) that result in
a small increase in content size (20 bytes x 2 changes).
This warning exists to prevent git users from prematurely polluting
their namespace when trying out Mercurial. But for repos that already
have multiple branches, understanding what branches are is not
optional so we should just shut up.
When the progress extension is not enabled, each call to 'ui.progress' used to
issue a debug message. This results is a very verbose output and often redundant
in tests. Dropping it makes tests less volatile to factor they do not meant to
test.
We had to alter the sed trick in 'test-rename-merge2.t'. Sed is used to drop all
output from a certain point and hidding the progress output remove its anchor.
So we anchor on something else.
If the "-r" argument is specified to "hg push," the user has expressed
an intent for a specific changeset to be present on the remote. If that
expression cannot be mapped to a known changeset, the user's intent is
ambiguous and cannot be acted upon without making assumptions.
Previously, if arguments to `push -r <rev>` evaluated to an empty set
(perhaps the user specified a revset that didn't evaluate to anything),
the empty "revs" list would be passed down to "exchange.push" where
it appears the empty list was being interpreted as "push everything."
This patch adds validation to the "-r" argument to the push command. If
the argument is specified but doesn't resolve to a changeset, the
command will abort instead of doing something potentially unexpected.
This patch is technically breaking backwards compatibility. I believe
this is justified because the new behavior closes a crack that could
result in undefined or under-defined behavior. Also, this patch doesn't
drop client capabilities because if users really wanted to push all
changesets, they can simply omit the "-r" argument from push completely.
This is kind of similar to the debugbundle command but gives summarized actual
uncompressed number of bytes when creating the bundle. The numbers are as
usable as the bundle format is efficient. Hopefully bundle2 will make it a
better indicator of actual entropy.
This is useful when accepting pull requests to assess whether the repo size
increase seems reasonable for the diff before pushing stuff upstream, It has
helped me catching large files that should have been committed as largefiles
but was committed as regular files in intermediate changesets.
This output doesn't combine well with debug output so we only enable it when
verbose without debug.
The discovery of necessary bookmark updates is now done within the "discovery
phase". This opens the door to the inclusion of bookmarks in a unified bundle2
push.
This message frequently caused confusion. "unsynced" is not a well established
user-facing concept in Mercurial and the message was not very specific or
helpful.
Instead, show a message like:
remote has heads on branch 'default' that are not known locally: 6c0482d977a3
This message will also (when relevant) be shown before aborting on "push
creates new remote head".
A similar (but actually very different) message was addressed in cbd5a12a601a.
This patch revises hint message from "for detail about" introduced by
changeset 49ed20ea8da0 to "for details about", to unify it with the
hint message introduced by proceeding patch.
"use push -f to force" in the hint at abortion of "hg push" may cause
novice users to execute "push -f" easily without understanding about
problems of multiple branch heads in the repository.
This patch hides description about "-f" in the hint, and leads into
seeing "hg help push" for details about pushing new heads.
Before this patch, pushing with --new-branch permits to create
multiple headed branch on the destination repository.
But permitting to create new branch should be different from
permitting to create multiple heads on branch.
This patch prevents from careless pushing multiple headed new branch,
and requires --force to push such branch forcibly.
Many tests didn't change back from subdirectories at the end of the tests ...
and they don't have to. The missing 'cd ..' could always be added when another
test case is added to the test file.
This change do that tests (99.5%) consistently end up in $TESTDIR where they
started, thus making it simpler to extend them or move them around.
Currently we have the following return codes if nothing is found:
commit incoming outgoing pull push
intended 1 1 1 1 1
documented 1 1 1 0 1
actual 1 1 1 0 0
This fixes the lower-right entry.
This means that we now discover both subset conditions (local<remote and
remote<local) in a single roundtrip without ever constructing an actual
sample (which takes a bit of client CPU).
previously, this info was only shown with --debug
Note that the new remote heads are only shown if the command aborts,
that is, they are *not* shown if --force was specified.
See also change 914ebeb62db8.
and don't mention the branch if it's the default branch.
OLD:
$ hg push ../a
pushing to ../a
searching for changes
abort: push creates new remote heads on branch 'default'!
(you should pull and merge or use push -f to force)
NEW:
$ hg push ../a
pushing to ../a
searching for changes
abort: push creates new remote head 1e108cc5548c!
(you should pull and merge or use push -f to force)
This helps to identify which local head is causing troubles.
See also change 914ebeb62db8.
Adds a new discovery method based on repeatedly sampling the still
undecided subset of the local node graph to determine the set of nodes
common to both the client and the server.
For small differences between client and server, it uses about the same
or slightly fewer roundtrips than the old tree-based discovery. For
larger differences, it typically reduces the number of roundtrips
drastically (from 150 to 4, for instance).
The old discovery code now lives in treediscovery.py, the new code is
in setdiscovery.py.
Still missing is a hook for extensions to contribute nodes to the
initial sample. For instance, Augie's remotebranches could contribute
the last known state of the server's heads.
Credits for the actual sampler and computing common heads instead of
bases go to Benoit Boissinot.
This is a long desired cleanup and paves the way for new discovery.
To specify subsets for bundling changes, all code should use the heads
of the desired subset ("heads") and the heads of the common subset
("common") to be excluded from the bundled set. These can be used
revlog.findmissing instead of revlog.nodesbetween.
This fixes an actual bug exposed by the change in test-bundle-r.t
where we try to bundle a changeset while specifying that said changeset
is to be assumed already present in the target. This used to still
bundle the changeset. It no longer does. This is similar to the bugs
fixed by the recent switch to heads/common for incoming/pull.
This backs out
changeset: 13158:17d1b96c0f12
user: Mads Kiilerich <mads@kiilerich.com>
date: Tue Dec 07 03:29:21 2010 +0100
summary: merge: fast-forward merge with descendant
Before named branches, the invariants were:
a) "merges" always have two parents
b) p1 is not linearly related to p2
Adding named branches made (b) problematic, so the above patch was
introduced, which fixed (b) but broke (a).
After discussion, we decided that the invariants should be:
a) "merges" always have two parents
b) p1 is not linearly related to p2 OR p1 and p2 are on different branches
issue2538 gives a case where a changeset is merged with its child (which is on
another branch), and to my surprise the result is a real merge with two
parents, not just a "fast forward" "merge" with only the child as parent.
That is essentially the same as issue619.
Is the existing behaviour as intended and correct?
Or is the following fix correct?
Some extra "created new head" pops up with this fix, but it seems to me like
they could be considered correct. The old branch head has been superseeded by
changes on the other branch, and when the changes on the other branch is merged
back to the branch it will introduce a new head not directly related to the
previous branch head.
(I guess the intention with existing behaviour could be to ensure that the
changesets on the branch are directly connected and that no new heads pops up
on merges.)
With this patch applied, Mercurial will list the hashes of new remote heads
if push --debug aborts because of new remote heads (option -f/--force not set).
Example:
$ hg push --debug repo1
using http://example.org/repo1
http auth: user johndoe, password not set
sending between command
pushing to http://example.org/repo1
sending capabilities command
capabilities: changegroupsubset stream=1 lookup pushkey unbundle=HG10GZ,HG10BZ,HG10UN branchmap
sending heads command
searching for changes
common changesets up to 187dd3f0a37d
sending branchmap command
new remote heads on branch 'default' <- new output line
new remote head 5862c07f53a2 <- new output line
abort: push creates new remote heads on branch 'default'!
(did you forget to merge? use push -f to force)
Compare to without --debug (not changed by this patch, including it here
for reference purposes only):
$ hg push repo1
pushing to http://example.org/repo1
searching for changes
abort: push creates new remote heads on branch 'default'!
(did you forget to merge? use push -f to force)
Motivation for this change:
'hg outgoing' may list a whole lot of benign changesets plus an odd changeset
that will trigger the "new remote heads" abort. It can be hard to spot that
single unwanted changeset (it may be an old forgotten experiment, lingering
in the local repo).
"hg log -r 'heads(outgoing())'" might be useful, but that also lists a head
that may be benign on push.
Inside prepush(), we already know which heads are causing troubles on 'hg push'.
Why not make that info available (at least on --debug)?
This would also be helpful for doing remote support, as the supporter can ask
the user to paste the output of 'hg push --debug' on error and then ask further
questions about the heads listed.