tests/test-issue619.t
author Angel Ezquerra <angel.ezquerra@gmail.com>
Sun, 01 Apr 2012 14:12:14 +0200
changeset 16402 1fb2f1400ea8
parent 15615 41885892796e
child 23413 0c432696dae3
permissions -rw-r--r--
revset: add "matching" keyword This keyword can be used to find revisions that "match" one or more fields of a given set of revisions. A revision matches another if all the selected fields (description, author, branch, date, files, phase, parents, substate, user, summary and/or metadata) match the corresponding values of those fields on the source revision. By default this keyword looks for revisions that whose metadata match (description, author and date) making it ideal to look for duplicate revisions. matching takes 2 arguments (the second being optional): 1.- rev: a revset represeting a _single_ revision (e.g. tip, ., p1(.), etc) 2.- [field(s) to match]: an optional string containing the field or fields (separated by spaces) to match. Valid fields are most regular context fields and some special fields: * regular fields: - description, author, branch, date, files, phase, parents, substate, user. Note that author and user are synonyms. * special fields: summary, metadata. - summary: matches the first line of the description. - metatadata: It is equivalent to matching 'description user date' (i.e. it matches the main metadata fields). Examples: 1.- Look for revisions with the same metadata (author, description and date) as the 11th revision: hg log -r "matching(11)" 2.- Look for revisions with the same description as the 11th revision: hg log -r "matching(11, description)" 3.- Look for revisions with the same 'summary' (i.e. same first line on their description) as the 11th revision: hg log -r "matching(11, summary)" 4.- Look for revisions with the same author as the current revision: hg log -r "matching(., author)" You could use 'user' rather than 'author' to get the same result. 5.- Look for revisions with the same description _AND_ author as the tip of the repository: hg log -r "matching(tip, 'author description')" 6.- Look for revisions touching the same files as the parent of the tip of the repository hg log -r "matching(p1(tip), files)" 7.- Look for revisions whose subrepos are on the same state as the tip of the repository or its parent hg log -r "matching(p1(tip):tip, substate)" 8.- Look for revisions whose author and subrepo states both match those of any of the revisions on the stable branch: hg log -r "matching(branch(stable), 'author substate')"

http://mercurial.selenic.com/bts/issue619

  $ hg init
  $ echo a > a
  $ hg ci -Ama
  adding a

  $ echo b > b
  $ hg branch b
  marked working directory as branch b
  (branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?)
  $ hg ci -Amb
  adding b

  $ hg co -C 0
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved

Fast-forward:

  $ hg merge b
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (branch merge, don't forget to commit)
  $ hg ci -Ammerge

Bogus fast-forward should fail:

  $ hg merge b
  abort: merging with a working directory ancestor has no effect
  [255]