commit: use `dirstate.change_files` to scope the associated `addremove`
This was significantly more complicated than I expected, because multiple
extensions get in the way.
I introduced a context that lazily open the transaction and associated context
to work around these complication. See the inline documentation for details.
Introducing the wrapping transaction remove the need for dirstate-guard (one of
the ultimate goal of all this), and slightly affect the result of a `hg
rollback` after a `hg commit --addremove`. That last part is deemed fine. It
aligns the behavior with what happens after a failed `hg commit --addremove` and
nobody should be using `hg rollback` anyway.
The small output change in the test come from the different transaction timing
and fact the transaction now backup the dirstate before the addremove, which
might mean "no file to backup" when the repository starts from an empty state.
#require no-msys # MSYS will translate web paths as if they were file paths
This is a test of the wire protocol over CGI-based hgweb.
initialize repository
$ hg init test
$ cd test
$ echo a > a
$ hg ci -Ama
adding a
$ cd ..
$ cat >hgweb.cgi <<HGWEB
> #
> # An example CGI script to use hgweb, edit as necessary
> import cgitb
> cgitb.enable()
> from mercurial import demandimport; demandimport.enable()
> from mercurial.hgweb import hgweb
> from mercurial.hgweb import wsgicgi
> application = hgweb(b"test", b"Empty test repository")
> wsgicgi.launch(application)
> HGWEB
$ chmod 755 hgweb.cgi
try hgweb request
$ . "$TESTDIR/cgienv"
$ QUERY_STRING="cmd=changegroup&roots=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"; export QUERY_STRING
$ "$PYTHON" hgweb.cgi >page1 2>&1
$ "$PYTHON" "$TESTDIR/md5sum.py" page1
1f424bb22ec05c3c6bc866b6e67efe43 page1
make sure headers are sent even when there is no body
$ QUERY_STRING="cmd=listkeys&namespace=nosuchnamespace" "$PYTHON" hgweb.cgi
Status: 200 Script output follows\r (esc)
Content-Type: application/mercurial-0.1\r (esc)
Content-Length: 0\r (esc)
\r (esc)