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.
I tried adding quotes to the $PYTHON variable, and also tried converting the
path from the current 'c:/Python/python.exe' form to '/c/python/python.exe', but
neither worked. I'm not sure why one of these needs '\"' around the variable
and the other doesn't.
The result of diffstatdata should not depend on having noprefix set or not, as
was reported in issue 4755. Forcing noprefix to false on call makes sure the
parser receives the diff in the correct format and returns the proper result.
Another way to fix this would have been to change the regular expressions in
path.diffstatdata(), but that would have introduced many unecessary special
cases.
Previously, when a patch contained a move or copy from a source that did not
exist, `hg import` would crash. This patch changes import to raise a PatchError
with an explanantion of what is wrong with the patch to avoid the stack trace
and bad user experience.
Import uses paths relative to the root of the repository, so when
user imports patch with paths relative to the current working directory
import aborts with 'unable to find file for patching'.
This patch improves this situation by warning the user that paths are
relative to the root of repository when patching fails.
This patch includes addition of absolute_import and print_function to the
files where they are missing. The modern importing conventions are also followed.
The extension was failing to load on Windows because $TESTTMP contains a path
component 'test', prefixed by a path separator '\'. That combination ends up
converted to "...<tab>est...".
This patch centralizes passing HG_PENDING to external hook process
into '_exthook()'. To make in-memory changes visible to external hook
process, this patch does:
- write (or schedule to write) in-memory dirstate changes, and
- set HG_PENDING environment variable, if:
- a transaction is running, and
- there are in-memory changes to be visible
This patch tests some commands with some hooks, because transaction
activity of a same hook differs from each other ("---": "not tested").
======== ========= ========= ============
command preupdate precommit pretxncommit
======== ========= ========= ============
unshelve o --- ---
backout x --- ---
import --- o o
qrefresh --- x o
======== ========= ========= ============
Each hooks are examined separately to prevent in-memory changes from
being visible to external process accidentally by side effect of hooks
previously invoked.
Before this patch, external editor process for the commit log can't
view some in-memory changes (especially, of dirstate), because they
aren't written out until the end of transaction (or wlock).
This causes unexpected output of Mercurial commands spawned from that
editor process.
To make in-memory changes visible to external editor process, this
patch does:
- write (or schedule to write) in-memory dirstate changes, and
- set HG_PENDING environment variable, if:
- a transaction is running, and
- there are in-memory changes to be visible
"hg diff" spawned from external editor process for "hg qrefresh"
shows:
- "changes newly imported into the topmost" before ab68b153ce34(*)
- "all changes recorded in the topmost by refreshing" after this patch
(*) ab68b153ce34 changed steps invoking editor process
Even though backward compatibility may be broken, the latter behavior
looks reasonable, because "hg diff" spawned from the editor process
consistently shows "what changes new revision records" regardless of
invocation context.
In fact, issue4378 itself should be resolved by b46029eb5b29, which
made 'repo.transaction()' write in-memory dirstate changes out
explicitly before starting transaction. It also made "hg qrefresh"
imply 'dirstate.write()' before external editor invocation in call
chain below.
- mq.queue.refresh
- strip.strip
- repair.strip
- localrepository.transaction
- dirstate.write
- localrepository.commit
- invoke external editor
Though, this patch has '(issue4378)' in own summary line to indicate
that issues like issue4378 should be fixed by this.
BTW, this patch adds '-m' option to a 'hg ci --amend' execution in
'test-commit-amend.t', to avoid invoking external editor process.
In this case, "unsure" states may be changed to "clean" according to
timestamp or so on. These changes should be written into pending file,
if external editor invocation is required,
Then, writing dirstate changes out breaks stability of test, because
it shows "transaction abort!/rollback completed" occasionally.
Aborting after editor process invocation while commands below may
cause similar instability of tests, too (AFAIK, there is no more such
one, at this revision)
- commit --amend
- without --message/--logfile
- import
- without --message/--logfile,
- without --no-commit,
- without --bypass,
- one of below, and
- patch has no description text, or
- with --edit
- aborting at the 1st patch, which adds or removes file(s)
- if it only changes existing files, status is checked only for
changed files by 'scmutil.matchfiles()', and transition from
"unsure" to "normal" in dirstate doesn't occur (= dirstate
isn't changed, and written out)
- aborting at the 2nd or later patch implies other pending
changes (e.g. changelog), and always causes showing
"transaction abort!/rollback completed"
'localrepository.rollback()' explicilty restores dirstate, only if at
least one of current parents of the working directory is removed at
rollbacking (a.k.a "parent-gone").
After DirstateTransactionPlan, 'dirstate.write()' will cause marking
'.hg/dirstate' as a file to be restored at rollbacking.
https://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/DirstateTransactionPlan
Then, 'transaction.rollback()' restores '.hg/dirstate' regardless of
parents of the working directory at that time, and this causes
unexpected dirstate changes if not "parent-gone" (e.g. "hg update" to
another branch after "hg commit" or so, then "hg rollback").
To avoid such situation, this patch restores dirstate to one before
rollbacking if not "parent-gone".
before:
b1. restore dirstate explicitly, if "parent-gone"
after:
a1. save dirstate before actual rollbacking via dirstateguard
a2. restore dirstate via 'transaction.rollback()'
a3. if "parent-gone"
- discard backup (a1)
- restore dirstate from 'undo.dirstate'
a4. otherwise, restore dirstate from backup (a1)
Even though restoring dirstate at (a3) after (a2) seems redundant,
this patch keeps this existing code path, because:
- it isn't ensured that 'dirstate.write()' was invoked at least once
while transaction running
If not, '.hg/dirstate' isn't restored at (a2).
In addition to it, rude 3rd party extension invoking
'dirstate.write()' without 'repo' while transaction running (see
subsequent patches for detail) may break consistency of a file
backup-ed by transaction.
- this patch mainly focuses on changes for DirstateTransactionPlan
Restoring dirstate at (a3) itself should be cheaper enough than
rollbacking itself. Redundancy will be removed in next step.
Newly added test is almost meaningless at this point. It will be used
to detect regression while implementing delayed dirstate write out.
As we have a way for extension to add more header, we need a way for them to
actually process them. We add a basic hook point to do extra work after the
import have been committed.
As we have a way for extension to add more header, we need a way for them to
actually process them. We add a basic hook points to alter the changeset
(especially extra) before we commit. There would be more to do for a full
featured hooking, but this currently fit my needs.
The phase of the pending commit depends on the parent of the working directory
and on the phases.newcommit configuration.
First, this information rather depend on the commit line which describe the
pending commit.
Then, we only want to be advertised when the pending phase is going to be higher
than the default new commit phase.
So the format will change from
$ hg summary
parent: 2:ab91dfabc5ad
foo
parent: 3:24f1031ad244 tip
bar
branch: default
commit: 1 modified, 1 unknown, 1 unresolved (merge)
update: (current)
phases: 1 secret (secret)
to
parent: 2:ab91dfabc5ad
foo
parent: 3:24f1031ad244 tip
bar
branch: default
commit: 1 modified, 1 unknown, 1 unresolved (merge) (secret)
update: (current)
phases: 1 secret
The number of draft and secret changesets are currently not summarized.
This is an important information because the number of drafts give some rough
idea of the number of outgoing changesets in typical workflows, without needing
to probe a remote repository. And a non-zero number of secrets means that
those changeset will not be pushed.
If the repository is "dirty" - some draft or secret changesets exists - then
summary will display a line like:
phases: X draft, Y secret (public)
The phase in parenthesis corresponds to the highest phase of the parents of
the working directory, i.e. the current phase.
By default, the line is not printed if the repository is "clean" - all
changesets are public - but if verbose is activated, it will display:
phases: (public)
On the other hand, nothing will be printed if quiet is in action.
A few tests have been added in test-phases.t to cover the -v and -q cases.
commitctx already showed notes with filenames but didn't provide any context.
It is just as relevant to know when manifest or changelog is committed.
So, in addition to filenames, also show headlines 'committing files:',
'committing manifest' and 'committing changelog'.
This test, written after 3.0, is relying on addset being enforced ascending if
both side are ascending. We are about to restore the ordering to 2.9 behavior
(elements are ordered in the order they are specified). We fix the test before
fixing the order.
Before this patch, external editor is invoked when imported patch has
no commit message, even if "--exact" is specified. Then, exact-ness is
broken, because empty commit message causes failure of committing.
This patch avoids editor invocation at importing with "--exact" for
exact-ness, because commit message in the patch should be kept as it
is in such case, even if it is empty.
"editform" argument for "getcommiteditor" is decided according to the
format below:
COMMAND[.ROUTE]
- COMMAND: name of command
- ROUTE: name of route, if there are two or more routes in COMMAND
This patch uses "normal.normal" and "normal.merge" as ROUTE of
"editform" instead of "normal", to distinguish merge commits from
other in "hg import" without "--bypass" case.
This patch assumes "editform" variations for "hg import" below:
import.normal.normal
import.normal.merge
import.bypass.normal
import.bypass.merge
Unlike other patches in this series, this patch uses "editor.sh"
instead of "checkeditform.sh" for the name of the script to check
"HGEDITFORM", because it has to do more than checking "HGEDITFORM".
To invoke editor forcibly in "test-import-merge.t", this patch creates
the patch not having patch description as "merge.nomsg.diff".
The `hg import` command gains a `--partial` flag. When specified, a commit will
always be created from a patch import. Any hunk that fails to apply will
create .rej file, same as what `hg qimport` would do. This change is mainly
aimed at preserving changeset metadata when applying a patch, something very
important for reviewers.
In case of failure with `--partial`, `hg import` returns 1 and the following
message is displayed:
patch applied partially
(fix the .rej files and run `hg commit --amend`)
When multiple patches are imported, we stop at the first one with failed hunks.
In the future, someone may feel brave enough to tackle a --continue flag to
import.
This patch also enhances "test-import-bypass.t" and "test-import.t",
because "hg import" hasn't been explicitly tested around editor
invocation and "--edit" option.
This patch explicitly tests below:
- with "--bypass" (regardless of "--edit"):
- not invoked, if the patch contains the commit message
- not invoked, if the commit message is explicitly specified
- invoked, otherwise (just adding comment)
- without "--bypass":
- with "--edit":
- not invoked, if "--no-commit" is not specified
- invoked, otherwise
- without "--edit":
- not invoked, if the patch contains the commit message
- not invoked, if "--message" or "--logfile" is specified
(just adding comment)
- invoked, otherwise
'export' is the official export format and used by patchbomb, but it would only
show date as a timestamp that most humans might find it hard to relate to. It
would be very convenient when reviewing a patch to be able to see what
timestamp the patch will end up with.
Mercurial has always used util.parsedate for parsing these headers. It can
handle 'all' date formats, so we could just as well use a readable one.
'export' will now use the format used by 'log' - which is the format described
as 'Unix date format' in the templating help. We assume that all parsers of '#
HG changeset patch'es can handle that.
Some tests ended up in a directory several directories deeper than $TESTTMP,
usually because some 'cd ..' had been forgotten between different test cases.
Add 'cd ..' where they are missing so the tests get back where they started.
Since f7e538c3b7ba, if a chunk starts with "@@ -0,1", oldstart turns into
a negative value. Because diffhelpers.testhunk() doesn't expect negative bstart,
it bypasses "alen > blen - bstart" condition and segfaults at
"PyList_GET_ITEM(b, i + bstart)".
The previous code was assuming a default context of 3 lines. When fuzzing, it
would take this value in account to reduce the amount of removed line from
hunks top or bottom. For instance, if a hunk has only 2 lines of bottom
context, fuzzing with fuzz=1 would do nothing and with fuzz=2 it would remove
one of those lines. A hunk with one line of bottom context could not be fuzzed
at all. patch(1) has apparently no such restrictions and takes the fuzz level
at face value.
- test-import.t: fuzz/offset changes at the beginning of file are explained by
the new fuzzing behaviour and match patch(1) ones. Patching locations are
different but those of my patch(1) do not make a lot of sense right now
(patched output are the same)
- test-import-bypass.t: more agressive fuzzing makes a patching supposed to
fail because of context, succeed. Change the diff to avoid this.
- test-mq-merge.t: more agressive fuzzing would allow the merged patch to apply
with fuzz, but fortunately we disallow this behaviour. The new output is
kept.
I have not enough experience with patch(1) fuzzing to know whether aligning our
implementation on it is a good or bad idea. Until now, it has been the
implementation reference. For instance, "qpush" tolerates fuzz (test-mq-merge.t
runs the special case of pushing merge revisions where fuzzing is forbidden).
When applying hunks such as:
@@ -2,1 +2,2 @@
context
+change
fuzzing would empty the "old" block and make patchfile.apply() traceback.
Instead, we apply the new block at specified location without testing.
The "bottom hunk" test was removed as patch(1) has no problem applying hunk
with no context in the middle of a file.
There is no reason to discard copy sources from the set of files considered by
addremove(). It was done to handle the case where a first patch would create
'a' and a second one would move 'a' to 'b'. If these patches were applied with
--no-commit, 'a' would first be marked as added, then unlinked and dropped from
the dirstate but still passed to addremove(). A better fix is thus to exclude
removed files which ends being dropped from the dirstate instead of removed.
Reported by Jason Harris <jason@jasonfharris.com>
Prior to this patch "hg diff -U0", i.e., zero lines of context, would
output hunk headers with a start line one greater than what GNU patch
and git output. Guido van Rossum documents the unified diff format[1]
as having a start line value "one lower than one would expect" for
zero length hunks.
Comparing the behaviour of the three systems prior to this patch in
transforming
c1
c3
to
c1
c2
c3
- GNU "diff -U0" reports the hunk as "@@ -1,0 +2 @@"
- "git diff -U0" reports the hunk as "@@ -1,0 +2 @@"
- "hg diff -U0" reports the hunk as "@@ -2,0 +2,1 @@"
After this patch, "hg diff -U0" reports "@@ -1,0 +2,1 @@".
Since "hg export --config diff.unified=0" outputs zero-context unified
diffs, "hg import" has also been updated to account for start lines
one less than expected for zero length hunk ranges.
[1]: http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=164293
Now 'rollback' after 'import' is less surprising: it rolls back all of
the imported changesets, not just the last one. As an extra added
benefit, you don't need 'rollback -f' after 'import --bypass', which
was an undesired side effect of fixing issue2998 (f9f52d71c33b)..
Note that this is a different take on issue963, which complained that
rollback after importing multiple patches returned the working dir
parent to the starting point, not to the second-last patch applied.
Since we now rollback the entire import, returning the working dir to
the starting point is entirely logical. So this change also undoes
b12d79024900, the fix to issue963, and updates its tests accordingly.
Bottom line: rollback after import was weird before issue963,
understandable since the fix for issue963, and even better now.
The old code printed (with ui.status()) the changeset ID created by
patch N after committing patch N+1, e.g.
applying patch1
applying patch2
applied 1d4bd90af0e4
where 1d4bd90af0e4 is the changeset ID resulting from patch1. That's
just weird. It's also inconsistent: we only reported the changeset ID
when applying >1 patches. And it's inconsistent with 'commit', which
only tells you the new changeset ID in verbose mode. Finally, the
existing code was I18N-hostile, since it concatenated translated
strings.
The new way is to print the just-created changeset ID with ui.note()
immediately after committing it. It also clarifies what the user
message is for easier I18N.
git patches may require copies to be handled out-of-order. For instance, take
the following sequence:
* modify a
* copy a into b
Here, we have to generate b from a before its modification. To do so,
applydiff() was scanning for copy metadata and performing the copies before
processing the other changes in-order. While smart and efficient, this approach
complicates things by handling file copies and file creations at different
places and times. While a new file must not exist before being patched a copied
file already exists before applying the first hunk.
Instead of copying the files at their final destination before patching, we
store them in a temporary file location and retrieve them when patching. The
filestore always stores file content in real files but nothing prevents adding
a cache layer. The filestore class was kept separate from fsbackend for at
least two reasons:
- This class is likely to be reused as a temporary result store for a future
repository patching call (entries just have to be extended to contain copy
sources).
- Delegating this role to backends might be more efficient in a repository
backend case: the source files are already available in the repository itself
and do not need to be copied again. It also means that third-parties backend
would have to implement two other methods. If we ever decide to merge the
filestore feature into backend, a minimalistic approach would be to compose
with filestore directly. Keep in mind this copy overhead only applies for
copy/rename sources, and may even be reduced to copy sources which have to
handled ahead of time.
Previously, when rolling back a transaction, some users could be confused
between the level to which the store is rolled back, and the new parents
of the working directory.
$ hg rollback
rolling back to revision 4 (undo commit)
With this change:
$ hg rollback
repository tip rolled back to tip revision 4 (undo commit)
working directory now based on revision 2 and 1
So now the user can realize that the store has been rolled back to an older
tip, but also that the working directory may not on the tip (here we are
rolling back the merge of the heads 2 and 1)
When issuing `hg pull -r REV` in a repo with no common ancestor with the
remote repo, the message 'requesting all changes' is printed, even though only
the changese that are ancestors of REV are actually requested. This can be
confusing for users (see
http://www.selenic.com/pipermail/mercurial/2010-October/035508.html).
This silences the message if (and only if) the '-r' option was passed.