Python 2.6 introduced the "except type as instance" syntax, replacing
the "except type, instance" syntax that came before. Python 3 dropped
support for the latter syntax. Since we no longer support Python 2.4 or
2.5, we have no need to continue supporting the "except type, instance".
This patch mass rewrites the exception syntax to be Python 2.6+ and
Python 3 compatible.
This patch was produced by running `2to3 -f except -w -n .`.
The phrase "cannot edit immutable changeset" is kind of tautological.
Of course unchangeable things can't be changed. We instead mention
"public" and provide a hint so that we can point to the actual
problem. Even in cases where some operation other than edition cannot
be performed, "public" gives the root cause that results in the
"immutable" effect.
There is a precedent for saying "public" instead of "immutable", for
example, in `hg commit --amend`.
Extension authors (notably at companies using hg) have been
cargo-culting the `testedwith = 'internal'` bit from hg's own
extensions, which then defeats our "file bugs over here" logic in
dispatch. Let's be more aggressive about trying to give extension
authors a hint about what testedwith should say.
Previously, mq used the force flag to allow empty commits. Now that we have
ui.allowemptycommit let's switch to that instead. We can't completely remove the
force flag since it is used for a bunch of other behavior in localrepo.commit.
Before this patch, "mq.queue.refresh()" uses "dirstate.invalidate()"
as a kind of "restore .hg/dirstate to the original status" during a failure.
But it just discards changes in memory, and doesn't actually restore
".hg/dirstate". Then, it can't work as expected, if "dirstate.write()"
is executed while processing.
This patch uses "dirstateguard" instead of "dirstate.invalidate()" to
restore ".hg/dirstate" during a failure even if "dirstate.write()" is
executed before a failure.
This patch also removes "beginparentchage()" and "endparentchange()",
because "dirstateguard" makes them useless.
This is a part of preparations to fix the issue that the recent (in
memory) dirstate isn't visible to external processes (e.g. "precommit"
hook).
Before this patch, "mq.queue.apply()" uses "dirstate.invalidate()" as
a kind of "restore .hg/dirstate to the original status" during afailure.
But it just discards changes in memory, and doesn't actually restore
".hg/dirstate". Then, it can't work as expected, if "dirstate.write()"
is executed while processing.
This patch uses "dirstateguard" instead of "dirstate.invalidate()" to
restore ".hg/dirstate" at failure even if "dirstate.write()" is
executed before failure.
This is a part of preparations to fix the issue that the recent (in
memory) dirstate isn't visible to external processes (e.g. "precommit"
hook).
The error-handling here is quite byzantine. self._apply raises an
AbortNoCleanup, but self.apply was swallowing the exception and
returns 2. In self.push, we catch all exceptions.. and cleanup. We try
to print a message to clean up.. but that relies on having a
top-of-stack.
Instead, we re-raise the abort in self.apply, and avoid cleanup on
AbortNoCleanup in self.push by adding a trivial new except clause. We
also modernize the now-visible abort message.
Although Python supports `X = Y if COND else Z`, this was only
introduced in Python 2.5. Since we have to support Python 2.4, it was
a very common thing to write instead `X = COND and Y or Z`, which is a
bit obscure at a glance. It requires some intricate knowledge of
Python to understand how to parse these one-liners.
We change instead all of these one-liners to 4-liners. This was
executed with the following perlism:
find -name "*.py" -exec perl -pi -e 's,(\s*)([\.\w]+) = \(?(\S+)\s+and\s+(\S*)\)?\s+or\s+(\S*)$,$1if $3:\n$1 $2 = $4\n$1else:\n$1 $2 = $5,' {} \;
I tweaked the following cases from the automatic Perl output:
prev = (parents and parents[0]) or nullid
port = (use_ssl and 443 or 80)
cwd = (pats and repo.getcwd()) or ''
rename = fctx and webutil.renamelink(fctx) or []
ctx = fctx and fctx or ctx
self.base = (mapfile and os.path.dirname(mapfile)) or ''
I also added some newlines wherever they seemd appropriate for readability
There are probably a few ersatz ternary operators still in the code
somewhere, lurking away from the power of a simple regex.
This change touches every module in which repository.wopener was being used, and
changes it for the equivalent repository.wvfs.
It should now be possible to remove localrepo.wopener.
This change touches every module in which repository.opener was being used, and
changes it for the equivalent repository.vfs. This is meant to make it easier
to split the repository.vfs into several separate vfs.
It should now be possible to remove localrepo.opener.
93eca2533d2a and 1deb493773a1 fixed issue4453 with a simple insertplainheader
function that fixed the regression but didn't make the implementation more
stable.
Now we introduce plain header handling similar to how we handle hg patches. The
whole header is scanned for fields to update while determining the best
position for inserting the field if it is missing. It also makes sure there is
an empty line between headers and body.
Mq tried to insert headers in the right order. Sometimes it would stop
searching before checking all headers and it could thus duplicate a header
instead of replacing it.
Fix inconsistent handling of plain header separation in mq patcheader - and
contrary to 05acc6157816, do it in the direction of having an empty line
between header and description. Plain patches are like mails and should thus
have an empty line between headers and body in compliance with RFC 822 3.1.
By making checklocalchanges() return the full instance of the status
class instead of just the first 4 elements of it, we can take
advantage of the field names and not require the caller to remember
the element indices.
Sorting is super-cheap with the new smartset class, so we can use it to enforce
the order. Otherwise all smartset classes would have to allow direct indexing.
Parent will now always be updated or added when qrefreshing HG patches. Plain
patches will not be changed, but patches that neither are plain nor HG will be
upgraded to HG patches on first refresh.
Don't try to append empty lines to HG patch headers - instead, add them in str
method.
This minor change removes some apparently redundant code and makes the code
more robust.
There would in some cases be an empty line between headers and the description -
that does not seem right.
There should also be an empty line between description and diff - but that was
missing.
These two mistakes would sometimes make it up for each other so we fix both at
once to just show the improvement.
Instead of writing an extra newline when writing a header line, write an extra
line when it not is written as a part of the description but is necessary
anyway.
Before this patch, "hg qselect" with --pop/--reapply may pop patches
unexpectedly, even when all of patches applied before "qselect" are
still pushable.
Strictly speaking about the condition of this issue:
- before "qselect"
- there are N applied patches
- the index of the guarded patch X in the series is less than N
- after "qselect"
- X is still guarded, and
- all of applied patched are still pushable
In the case above, "hg qselect" should keep current status, but it
actually tries to pop patches because of X.
The index in "the series" should be used to examine "pushable" of a
patch by "mq.pushablek()", but the index in "applied patches" is used,
and this may cause unexpected examination of guarded patch.
To examine "pushable" of already applied patch correctly, this patch
uses "mq.applied[i].name": "pushable" is the function introduced by
the previous patch, and it returns "mq.pushable(mq.applied[i].name)[0]".
Before this patch, "hg qselect" with --pop/--reapply may pop incorrect
patches, because the index in "applied patches" is used to pop patches
by "mq.pop()", even though the index in "the series" should be used.
For example, when the already applied patch becomes guarded and it
follows the already guarded (= not yet applied) one, "hg qselect" is
aborted, because it tries to pop to guarded one.
This patch uses "mq.applied[i - 1].name" to pop to the patch, of which
the index in the "applied ones" is "i - 1".
Before this patch, "hg qselect --reapply" is aborted when "--verbose"
is specified, because "mq.appliedname()" returns "INDEX PATCHNAME"
instead of "PATCHNAME" in such case and "mq.push" can't accept the
former as the name of patch.
This patch uses "mq.applied[i].name" instead of "mq.appliedname(i)" as
the name of the patch to be pushed for safety.
Now, there is no code path using "mq.appliedname()", and it should be
removed to prevent developers from using it in the wrong way like this
issue.
Before this patch, "hg qselect" may report incorrect numbers for
"number of guarded, applied patches has changed", because it examines
"pushable" of patches by the index not in "the series" but in "applied
patches", even though "mq.pushable()" expects the former.
To report correct numbers for changing "number of guarded, applied
patches", this patch uses the name of applied patch to examine
pushable-ness of it.
This patch also changes the result of existing "hg qselect" tests,
because they doesn't change pushable-ness of already applied patches.
This patch assumes that "hg qselect" focuses on changing pushable-ness
only of already applied patches, because:
- the report message uses not "previous" (in the series) but
"applied"
- the logic to pop patches for --pop/--reapply examines
pushable-ness only of already applied ones (in fact, there are
some incorrect code paths)
This patch changes help text for "--edit" option of commands below:
- fetch
- qnew
- qrefresh
- qfold
- commit
- tag
This unification reduces translation cost, too.
This patch chooses not "further edit commit message already specified"
(of "hg commit") but "invoke editor on commit messages" as unified
help text for "--edit" option, because the latter is much older than
the former.
This wraps all the locations of dirstate.setparent with the appropriate
begin/endparentchange calls. This will prevent exceptions during those calls
from causing incoherent dirstates (issue4353).
We now pass a transaction option to this phase movement function. The
object is currently not used by the function, but it will be in the
future.
All call sites have been updated. Most call sites were already enclosed in a
transaction for a long time. The handful of others have been recently
updated in previous commit.
We now pass a transaction option to this phase movement function. The object
is currently not used by the function, but it will be in the future.
All call sites have been updated. Most call sites were already enclosed in a
transaction for a long time. The handful of others have been recently
updated in previous commit.
The retractboundary function remains to be upgraded.
cset 21b4faf3787e has removed this option. This commit just tidies the
code that was associated to it. It also fixes the internal calls to
the strip() function.
Before this change, any function that thought it would want as a final
safety to keep a partial backup bundle (bundling changes not linearly
related to the current change being stripped), had to explicitly pass
a backup="strip" option. With this change, these backups are always
kept in case of an exception and always removed if there is no
exception. Only full backups can be specified with backup=True or no
full backups with backup=False.
This patch passes 'editform' argument according to the format below:
EXTENSION[.COMMAND][.ROUTE]
- EXTENSION: name of extension
- COMMAND: name of command, if there are two or more commands in EXTENSION
- ROUTE: name of route, if there are two or more routes in COMMAND
In this patch:
- MQ command names (qnew/qrefresh/qfold) are used as COMMAND
- ROUTE is omitted