We'll need the same logic in forthcoming changeset to handle --line-range
option in 'hg log' command.
The function lives in scmutil.py (rather than util.py) as it uses match and
pathutil modules.
Use the verbosity aware template keyword introduced earlier. It has the nice
property of being verbosity dependent but in order to customize the obsfate
part, users will need to replace the lobsfate definition from default mapfile
with the one using template functions (by copying the one from test-obsmarker-
template.t for example).
As it's a more advanced use-case, I'm more inclined to have the same code for
the {obsfate} keyword, in the changeset printer and in the default mapfile for
consistency.
But, the definition in default mapfile could be replaced with one based on
template filter to obsfate output customization if it is a big need for users.
Having an obsfate by default in log will be useful for users to understand why
they have obsolete and unstable changesets. Obsfate will only be shown for
obsolete changesets, which only happens if people opt-in to experimental feature.
But when obsolete changeset are visible, it is very useful to understand where
they are. Having it in log could be sufficient for most people, so they don't
have to learn a new command (like obslog which is itself useful in case of
divergences).
For example, when pulling and working directory parent become obsolete:
$ hg pull
...
working directory parent is obsolete! (f936c1697205)
This message comes from the Evolve extension.
Obsfate would comes handy:
$ hg log -G
o changeset: 2:6f91013c5136
| tag: tip
| parent: 0:4ef7b558f3ec
| user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
| date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200
| summary: A
|
| @ changeset: 1:f936c1697205
|/ user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
| date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200
| obsfate: rewritten using amend as 2:6f91013c5136
| summary: -A
|
o changeset: 0:feb4dd822b8c
user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
date: Tue Oct 09 16:00:00 2017 +0200
summary: ROOT
And once we update, we don't have an obsolete changeset in the log anymore so
we don't show obsfate anymore, most users won't see obsfate often if they
don't have obsolete changeset often:
@ changeset: 2:6f91013c5136
| tag: tip
| parent: 0:4ef7b558f3ec
| user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
| date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200
| summary: A
|
o changeset: 0:feb4dd822b8c
user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
date: Tue Oct 09 16:00:00 2017 +0200
summary: ROOT
Obsolescence is sometimes used only locally so the obs-marker users is always
the same. Showing the user in this case does not bring much values.
In the case where multiple users rewrite the commit, display the full list of
users. Also show all users in verbose mode.
Introduce an obsfate printer that uses all helpers functions defined in
obsutil to get all the obsfate-related data and format a string according to
the current format in test-obsmarker-template.t.
Then, introduce an obsfate templatekw that uses the obsfateprinter to return a
list of strings.
The goal is not to replace existing obsfate template functions but to propose
a default, good-enough and easily usable obsfate definition for end-users that
don't want to customize it. Such output would ultimately get included in the
default log output.
Here are some output examples for a commit amended:
rewritten using amend as 5:a9b1f8652753 by test (at 1970-01-01 00:00 +0000)
Next patches will make the output dependent on the verbosity.
Exemple of use-cases:
For having the obsfate on a single-line between brackets:
{if(obsfate, " [{join(obsfate, "; ")}]")}
For having the obsfate in several lines:
{if(obsfate, "{obsfate % " Obsfate: {fate}\n"}")}
The heuristics algorithm find possible candidates for move/copy and then check
whether they are actually a copy or move. In some cases, there can be lot of
candidates possible which can actually slow down the algorithm.
This patch introduces a config option
`experimental.copytrace.movecandidateslimit` using which one can limit the
candidates to check. The limit defaults to 100.
Thanks to Yuya for suggesting to skip copytracing for that file with a
warning.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D987
I have spent a lot of time debugging extensions that failed to load
because we don't include a traceback and I didn't realize I could get
traceback for the extension failure with --traceback. Let's just turn
them on by default, since it should be rare that the user sees these
tracebacks anyway (and if they do, it's not so bad if the extra
traceback pushes them a little harder to report the problem).
Since we already had a test case with --traceback and one without, I
just removed the one with the flag.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1164
A mercurial.bdiff module has existed at some point and when I have
built at an old version, some .pyc file or something seems to stick
around and test-extension.t fails. Let's remove the reference to bdiff
and simplify the test.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1162
The leading newline before "ERROR:" led to an incorrect lexing of the
message and the newline got lost.
The fixed formatting can be seen in the test case. The reason we
didn't notice before was that the bad formatting just led to the loss
of a blank line in the test. However, there are other cases where it
would be joined with a line saying "Accept this change? [n]" or
"Reference output has changed (run again to prompt changes)".
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1159
This test fails when run with chg. This commit just makes the test chg
aware by fixing the output of some of the tests.
Test Plan:
Ran the test 'test-extension.t' with and without '--chg' option.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1160
Chg disables demandimport on purpose for performance wins and
therefore, it probably makes sense to indicate that demandimport is disabled
when chg is running.
Test Plan:
Ran all the tests.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1161
The show extension reads `commands.show.aliasprefix` config in its
`extsetup` and that causes issues with chg. This patch adds that config item
to chg confighash to solve the issue.
Test Plan:
`run-tests.py -l --chg test-show.t`
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1158
We only want to do I/O in terms of bytes, so lets explode early
instead of recursing forever.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1136
The part we are using for pull is now used for push too. As we no longer use
pushkey, pushkey hooks are no longer triggered. This is an obvious backward
incompatible change. We could artificially trigger the pushkey hook within the
bundle2 part, but this seemed too hacky to me.
An option would be to disable by default this new mechanism for a couple of
versions to help people migrate to `txnclose-phase`. I took the liberal and
optimistic path to just turn it on by default directly.
.. bc::
Push no longer triggers a pushkey hook when updating phases. Use the new
`txnclose-phase` and `txnclose-phase` hooks instead.
(Applies when both server and client use version 4.4 or above).
`filecmp` follows symlinks by default, which a `filectx.cmp()` call should not
be doing as it should only compare the requested entry. After this patch, only
the contexts' data are compared, which is the correct contract.
This is a corrected version of D1122.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1165
For now all .c and .h files are blacklisted. As they become
clang-formatted, we'll remove them from the blacklist,and then this
test will produce output if there are diffs.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1133
Fix regression introduced in D785.
In some circumstances, context.clearunknown can be called before the path is
audited. Audit the path before deleting any conflicting files.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1157
D785 regressed behavior in path auditing: files can be deleted if they have a
path that conflicts with a filename from a malicious remote or bundle.
This test demonstrates the problem - the file should not have been deleted.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1156
The shelve extensions import and call rebase content without loading the
extension. This is problematic as the config items rebase uses are not
declared and the default value are not set, etc...
The shelve extension should be using core utilities only and the necessary bit
should be moved from rebase into core. In the meantime, I'm taking a small
step to get config registration completed with minimal overhead. The rebase
extension is shipped with core so registering its config option within core is
not a big issue.
This is the last step needed before we can install a warning that enforces all
config to be registered.
The acl extension is usually setup through hooks and never directly activated.
This means the config item declared in the extension are not loaded.
We add the necessary logic to make sure the extensions are loaded before the hook
run.
We register the merge-tools config section (which has an arbitrary base config
value) and the possible sub-attribute. The sub-attribute has to be registered
first or at the same time otherwise the '.*' item would shadow them.
Merge tools could include "." in their name so we can't constrain any more
than just ".*".
Delta chains can become quite sparse if there is a lot of unrelated data between
relevant pieces. Right now, revlog always reads all the necessary data for the
delta chain in one single read. This can lead to a lot of unrelated data to be
read (see issue5482 for more details).
One can use the `experimental.maxdeltachainspan` option with a large value
(or -1) to easily produce a very sparse delta chain.
This change introduces the ability to slice the chunks retrieval into multiple
reads, skipping large sections of unrelated data. Preliminary testing shows
interesting results. For example the peak memory consumption to read a manifest
on a large repository is reduced from 600MB to 250MB (200MB without
maxdeltachainspan). However, the slicing itself and the multiple reads can have
an negative impact on performance. This is why the new feature is hidden behind
an experimental flag.
Future changesets will add various parameters to control the slicing heuristics.
We hope to experiment a wide variety of repositories during 4.4 and hopefully
turn the feature on by default in 4.5.
As a first try, the algorithm itself is prone to deep changes. However, we wish
to define APIs and have a baseline to work on.
When a merge commit creates an empty diff in the revlog, its offset may still
be quite far from the end of the previous chunk.
Skipping these empty chunks may reduce read size significantly.
In most cases, there is no gain, and in some cases, little gain.
On my clone of pypy, `hg manifest` reads 65% less bytes (96140 i/o 275943) for
revision 4260 by ignoring the only empty trailing diff.
For revision 2229, 35% (34557 i/o 53435)
Sadly, this is difficult to reproduce, as hg clone can make its own different
structure every time.
Move the logic to build bundle2 pushkey part into its dedicated function. It
will help to keep the logic clear when adding support for sending phases change
using 'phase-heads' part.
We are about to switch phase pushing from using pushkey to using a the new
dedicated binary part. We introduce the push race detection on its own to help
detect potential impact.
This part checks if revisions are still in the same phase as when the
bundle was generated. This is similar to what 'check:heads' or
'check:updated-heads' bundle2 part achieves for changesets.
We needs seems before we can move away from pushkey usage from phase since
pushkey has it own built-in push-race detection.
This comment is about:
issue3781: Courtesy Phases synchronisation to publishing server prevent
subrepo push
Not about:
issue3871: Slow hg log when template contains {file_adds}, {file_mods} and
{file_dels}
The on-disk file can contain draft root that are descendants of secret root.
The resulting phase computation is correct, but the phases root content is
not. I will send another series to introduce code that remove some of the
cases where this can happens, but we first need to damage control the existing
case.
After this changeset, we can no longer advertise secret changeset as draft
root.
Previously, only the top level repo was shared, and then any subrepos were
cloned on demand. This is problematic because commits to the parent repo would
write an updated .hgsubstate to the share source, but the corresponding subrepo
commit would be stuck in the local subrepo. That would prevent an update in the
source repo. We already go to great lengths to avoid having inconsistent repos
(e.g., `hg push -r rev` will push _everything_ in a subrepo, even if it isn't
referenced in one of the parent's outgoing commits). Therefore, this seems like
a bug fix, and there's no option to get the old behavior. I can't imagine the
previous behavior was useful to anybody.
There shouldn't be an issue with svn, since it is centralized. Maybe --git-dir
can be used for git subrepos, but I'll leave that to someone more familiar with
git.
An integer was previously being implicitly returned from commands.share(), which
caused dispatch() to start crashing when changing over to returning the shared
repo. All error paths appear to raise, so this can be hardcoded to success.
The clone command checks for 'is None' in a similar pattern, but since
hg.clone() always returns a tuple, that seems wrong?
.. fix:: Issue 5675
Creating a share of a repository with a Mercurial subrepository will now
share the subrepository.
and
.. bc::
Mercurial subrepositories are now shared instead of cloned when the parent
repository is shared. This prevents dangling subrepository references in the
share source. Previously shared repositories with cloned subrepositories
will continue to function unchanged.
This will help us in determining easily that whether fuzzywuzzy is loaded or not
loaded in any of the function.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1120
While producing releasenotes for (4.3::), releasenotes aborts with error because
of some bad formatting of releasenotes in some commits. Instead of aborting,
this adds warning message which will help us in skipping them and telling user
about it.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1097
If fuzzywuzzy is note present, we will not be having the capability to merge
existing releasenotes with the new releasenotes on the similarity basis.
The merging will still work good for exact same releasenotes entries.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1096
__name__ is unicode, but we need bytes. For now, we'll make the
(mostly-safe) assumption that template filter names will be ascii.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1137
Stops us from choking the templater on Python 3. With this patch
applied, much of hgweb works correctly in Python 3. The notable
exception is the graph page, which chokes because it gets node IDs as
str instead of bytes.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1135