# In most cases, the mercurial repository can be read by the bundled hg, but # that isn't always true because third-party extensions may change the store # format, for example. In which case, the system hg installation is used. # # We want to use the hg version being tested when interacting with the test # repository, and the system hg when interacting with the mercurial source code # repository. # # The mercurial source repository was typically orignally cloned with the # system mercurial installation, and may require extensions or settings from # the system installation. # Revert the environment so that running "hg" runs the system hg # rather than the test hg installation. syshgenv () { . "$HGTEST_RESTOREENV" HGPLAIN=1 export HGPLAIN } # The test-repo is a live hg repository which may have evolution markers # created, e.g. when a ~/.hgrc enabled evolution. # # Tests may be run using a custom HGRCPATH, which do not enable evolution # markers by default. # # If test-repo includes evolution markers, and we do not enable evolution # markers, hg will occasionally complain when it notices them, which disrupts # tests resulting in sporadic failures. # # Since we aren't performing any write operations on the test-repo, there's # no harm in telling hg that we support evolution markers, which is what the # following lines for the hgrc file do: cat >> "$HGRCPATH" << EOF [experimental] evolution = createmarkers EOF # Use the system hg environment if the bundled hg can't read the repository with # no warning nor error. if [ -n "`hg files --cwd "$TESTDIR/" 2>&1 >/dev/null`" ]; then testrepohgenv () { syshgenv } else testrepohgenv () { # No need to do anything in this case. : } fi testrepohg () { ( testrepohgenv exec hg "$@" ) }