summary: add a phase line (draft, secret) to the output
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.
$ hg init
Issue562: .hgignore requires newline at end:
$ touch foo
$ touch bar
$ touch baz
$ cat > makeignore.py <<EOF
> f = open(".hgignore", "w")
> f.write("ignore\n")
> f.write("foo\n")
> # No EOL here
> f.write("bar")
> f.close()
> EOF
$ python makeignore.py
Should display baz only:
$ hg status
? baz
$ rm foo bar baz .hgignore makeignore.py
$ touch a.o
$ touch a.c
$ touch syntax
$ mkdir dir
$ touch dir/a.o
$ touch dir/b.o
$ touch dir/c.o
$ hg add dir/a.o
$ hg commit -m 0
$ hg add dir/b.o
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
? syntax
$ echo "*.o" > .hgignore
$ hg status
abort: $TESTTMP/.hgignore: invalid pattern (relre): *.o (glob)
[255]
$ echo ".*\.o" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
Check it does not ignore the current directory '.':
$ echo "^\." > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
? syntax
Test that patterns from ui.ignore options are read:
$ echo > .hgignore
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [ui]
> ignore.other = $TESTTMP/.hg/testhgignore
> EOF
$ echo "glob:**.o" > .hg/testhgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
empty out testhgignore
$ echo > .hg/testhgignore
Test relative ignore path (issue4473):
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [ui]
> ignore.relative = .hg/testhgignorerel
> EOF
$ echo "glob:*.o" > .hg/testhgignorerel
$ cd dir
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
$ cd ..
$ echo > .hg/testhgignorerel
$ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
$ echo "re:.*\.o" >> .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
$ echo "syntax: invalid" > .hgignore
$ hg status
$TESTTMP/.hgignore: ignoring invalid syntax 'invalid' (glob)
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
? syntax
$ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
$ echo "*.o" >> .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
$ echo "relglob:syntax*" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
$ echo "relglob:*" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
$ cd dir
$ hg status .
A b.o
$ hg debugignore
(?:(?:|.*/)[^/]*(?:/|$))
$ cd ..
Check patterns that match only the directory
$ echo "^dir\$" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? a.o
? syntax
Check recursive glob pattern matches no directories (dir/**/c.o matches dir/c.o)
$ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
$ echo "dir/**/c.o" >> .hgignore
$ touch dir/c.o
$ mkdir dir/subdir
$ touch dir/subdir/c.o
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? a.o
? syntax