py2exe: add workaround to allow bundling of hgext3rd.* extensions
py2exe doesn't know how to handle namespace packages *at all*, so it treats
them like normal packages. As a result, if we try and bundle hgext3rd.evolve
in a py2exe build, it won't work if we install evolve into the virtualenv. In
order to work around this, tortoisehg installs hgext3rd.evolve etc into its
staged hg directory, since it doesn't use a virtualenv. As a workaround for us,
we'll just allow any extra packages users want bundled are part of hg during
the pseudo-install phase that py2exe uses. I'm not happy about this, but it
*works*.
As a sample of how you'd make an MSI with evolve bundled:
import os
import shutil
import subprocess
import tempfile
def stage_evolve(version):
"""Stage evolve for inclusion in py2exe binary."""
with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as temp:
evolve = os.path.join(temp, "evolve")
subprocess.check_call([
"hg.exe",
"clone",
"https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/evolve/",
"--update",
version,
evolve,
])
dest = os.path.join('..', 'hgext3rd', 'evolve')
if os.path.exists(dest):
shutil.rmtree(dest)
shutil.copytree(os.path.join(evolve, "hgext3rd", "evolve"), dest)
def main():
stage_evolve('tip')
print("\0")
print("hgext3rd")
print("hgext3rd.evolve")
print("hgext3rd.evolve.hack")
print("hgext3rd.evolve.thirdparty")
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
is a script you can pass to the wix/build.py as --extra-packages-script,
and the resulting .msi will have an hg binary with evolve baked in. users
will still need to enable evolve in their hgrc, so you'd probably also
want to bundle configs in your msi for an enterprise environment, but that's
already easy to do with the support for extra features and wxs files in the
wix build process.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6189
= Test the known() protocol function =
Create a test repository:
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ touch a ; hg add a ; hg ci -ma
$ touch b ; hg add b ; hg ci -mb
$ touch c ; hg add c ; hg ci -mc
$ hg log --template '{node}\n'
991a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690
0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342
3903775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
$ cd ..
Test locally:
$ hg debugknown repo 991a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 3903775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
111
$ hg debugknown repo 000a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 0003775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
010
$ hg debugknown repo
Test via HTTP:
$ hg serve -R repo -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=hg.pid -E error.log -A access.log
$ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
$ hg debugknown http://localhost:$HGPORT/ 991a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 3903775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
111
$ hg debugknown http://localhost:$HGPORT/ 000a3460af53952d10ec8a295d3d2cc2e5fa9690 0e067c57feba1a5694ca4844f05588bb1bf82342 0003775176ed42b1458a6281db4a0ccf4d9f287a
010
$ hg debugknown http://localhost:$HGPORT/
$ cat error.log
$ killdaemons.py