pager: exit cleanly on SIGPIPE (BC)
Changeset aaa751585325 removes SIGPIPE handling completely. This is wrong,
as it means that Mercurial does not exit when the pager does. Instead, raise
SignalInterrupt when SIGPIPE happens with a pager attached, to trigger the
normal exit path.
This will cause "killed!" to be printed to stderr (hence the BC warning),
but in the normal pager use case (where the pager gets both stderr and
stdout), this message is lost as we only get SIGPIPE when the pager quits.
#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# runrst - register custom roles and run correct writer
#
# Copyright 2010 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
"""usage: %s WRITER args...
where WRITER is the name of a Docutils writer such as 'html' or 'manpage'
"""
import sys
try:
from docutils.parsers.rst import roles
from docutils.core import publish_cmdline
from docutils import nodes, utils
except ImportError:
sys.stderr.write("abort: couldn't generate documentation: docutils "
"module is missing\n")
sys.stderr.write("please install python-docutils or see "
"http://docutils.sourceforge.net/\n")
sys.exit(-1)
def role_hg(name, rawtext, text, lineno, inliner,
options={}, content=[]):
text = "hg " + utils.unescape(text)
linktext = nodes.literal(rawtext, text)
parts = text.split()
cmd, args = parts[1], parts[2:]
refuri = "hg.1.html#%s" % cmd
if cmd == 'help' and args:
if args[0] == 'config':
# :hg:`help config`
refuri = "hgrc.5.html"
elif args[0].startswith('config.'):
# :hg:`help config.SECTION...`
refuri = "hgrc.5.html#%s" % args[0].split('.', 2)[1]
elif len(args) >= 2 and args[0] == '-c':
# :hg:`help -c COMMAND ...` is equivalent to :hg:`COMMAND`
# (mainly for :hg:`help -c config`)
refuri = "hg.1.html#%s" % args[1]
else:
refuri = "hg.1.html#%s" % args[0]
node = nodes.reference(rawtext, '', linktext,
refuri=refuri)
return [node], []
roles.register_local_role("hg", role_hg)
if __name__ == "__main__":
if len(sys.argv) < 2:
sys.stderr.write(__doc__ % sys.argv[0])
sys.exit(1)
writer = sys.argv[1]
del sys.argv[1]
publish_cmdline(writer_name=writer)