These slashes are a hangover from issue3612, fixed in d5787cfaa7cf.
Although the bugfix in that commit is correct, the test it adds
does not replicate the conditions for the bug correctly.
This only applies to downloading largefiles, and only when no source for the
pull is explicitly provided. The repository itself was properly being pulled
via 'default' previously.
Using --all-largefiles is not necessary on a bare pull to test this (this
existing test is merely a convenience), but it is required to test pulling on
the rebase path.
Note that the errors generated in the --rebase case are because the repo
specified doesn't have the largefiles in its cache (though they are in the user
cache), so the errors are misleading. Specifying --all-largefiles when cloning
to 'b' fixes this, but instead of errors, it reports caching only 5 largefiles
instead of the 9 that come up missing. Likely this is because the largefile
download procedure tries to download missing files for each rev, and some of the
files have standins in more than one rev that gets pulled.
It looks like this method missed the updates in 7a899bd0f9c0 (which changed the
preferred discovery method from findcommonincoming() to findcommonoutgoing()),
and 8b2938386599 (which rolls up the outgoing lists into a single object).
Options like --delete and --rename are incompatible with each
other. In this case we abort. We do not abort if the result is a nullop.
Nullops are: '--delete --inactive', '--delete --force'.
This allows the user to set different colors for each phase, e.g.
[color]
changeset.public = blue
changeset.draft = green
changeset.secret = red
In addition, this doesn't affect current configuration for custom log.changeset
colors, but rather adds the option for users that want to visually see which
changesets are amendable.
We don't need to compute the set of all branchpoints. We can just check the
number of children that element of subset have. The extra work did not seems to
had particular performance impact but the code is simpler this way.
This makes sure that .hg/requires is observed and the correct kind of store
object is created. Otherwise we might mutilate our test repos when experimenting
with new repo formats.
After d5471ad04cf6 all \r was stripped from output on Windows, and the places
where a \r explicitly was expected it was accepted that it was missing. Ugly
hack.
Instead we now accept that an extra \r might appear at the end of lines on
Windows. That is more to the point and less ugly.
People were confused by the fact `obstore.precursors` contained marker allowing
to find "precursors" and vice-versa.
This changeset changes their meaning to:
- precursors[x] -> set(markers on precursors edges of x)
- successors[x] -> set(markers on successors edges of x)
Some documentation is added to clarify the situation.
Nullid as successors create multiple issues:
- Nullid revnum is -1, confusing algorithm that use revnum unless you add
special handling in all of them.
- Nullid confuses "divergent" changeset detection and resolution. As you can't
add any successors to Nullid without being in even more troubles
Fortunately, there is no good reason to use nullid as a successor. The only
sensible meaning of "succeed by nullid" is "dropped" and this meaning is already
covered by obsolescence marker with empty successors set.
However, letting some nullid successors to slip in may cause terrible damage in
such algorithm difficult to debug. So I prefer to perform and clear detection of
of such pathological changeset. We could be much smarter by cleaning up nullid
successors on the fly but it would be much for expensive. As core Mercurial does
not create any such changeset, I think it is fine to just abort when suspicious
situation is detected.
Earlier experimental version created such changesets, so there are some out
there. The evolve extension added the necessary logic to clean up its mess.
Maintain a whitelist of commands to infer the repo for instead. The whitelist
contains those commands that take file(s) in the working dir as arguments.
This changeset treats the bookmark "@" as a special case for the naming of
divergent bookmarks, as per the tables below. For the <no alias> case, the
actual suffix will vary, depending on what suffixes are already in use.
Before:
Bookmark | Remote | Divergent Bookmark
--------------------------------------
foo | bar | foo@bar
foo | <no alias> | foo@1
@ | bar | @@bar
@ | <no alias> | @@1
After:
Bookmark | Remote | Divergent Bookmark
--------------------------------------
foo | bar | foo@bar
foo | <no alias> | foo@1
@ | bar | @bar
@ | <no alias> | @1
This case is likely to be more common now that c1644655c164 has made the "@"
bookmark have special meaning to clone.
The change in behavior was discussed on the mailing list in the thread below:
http://markmail.org/thread/rwedgxp7le5j2h2f
We do not want hidden revision to block histedit. They are already "dead"
and we do not care about dead orphans. see similar changeset 40db49347807 for
rebase.