tests/test-rebase-rename.t
author Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@logilab.fr>
Tue, 24 Apr 2012 16:32:44 +0200
branchstable
changeset 16535 39d1f83eb05d
parent 13778 46c3043253fb
child 16913 f2719b387380
permissions -rw-r--r--
branchmap: server should not advertise secret changeset in branchmap (Issue3303) Discovery now use an overlay above branchmap to prune invisible "secret" changeset from branchmap. To minimise impact on the code during the code freeze, this is achieve by recomputing non-secret heads on the fly when any secret changeset exists. This is a computation heavy approach similar to the one used for visible heads. But few sever should contains secret changeset anyway. See comment in code for more robust approach. On local repo the wrapper is applied explicitly while the wire-protocol take care of wrapping branchmap call in a transparent way. This could be unified by the Peter Arrenbrecht and Sune Foldager proposal of a `peer` object. An inappropriate `(+i heads)` may still appear when pushing new changes on a repository with secret changeset. (see Issue3394 for details)

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
  > [extensions]
  > graphlog=
  > rebase=
  > 
  > [alias]
  > tlog  = log  --template "{rev}: '{desc}' {branches}\n"
  > tglog = tlog --graph
  > EOF


  $ hg init a
  $ cd a

  $ echo a > a
  $ hg ci -Am A
  adding a

  $ echo b > b
  $ hg ci -Am B
  adding b

  $ hg up -q -C 0

  $ hg mv a a-renamed

  $ hg ci -m 'rename A'
  created new head

  $ hg tglog
  @  2: 'rename A'
  |
  | o  1: 'B'
  |/
  o  0: 'A'
  

Rename is tracked:

  $ hg tlog -p --git -r tip
  2: 'rename A' 
  diff --git a/a b/a-renamed
  rename from a
  rename to a-renamed
  
Rebase the revision containing the rename:

  $ hg rebase -s 2 -d 1
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/a/.hg/strip-backup/*-backup.hg (glob)

  $ hg tglog
  @  2: 'rename A'
  |
  o  1: 'B'
  |
  o  0: 'A'
  

Rename is not lost:

  $ hg tlog -p --git -r tip
  2: 'rename A' 
  diff --git a/a b/a-renamed
  rename from a
  rename to a-renamed
  
  $ cd ..


  $ hg init b
  $ cd b

  $ echo a > a
  $ hg ci -Am A
  adding a

  $ echo b > b
  $ hg ci -Am B
  adding b

  $ hg up -q -C 0

  $ hg cp a a-copied
  $ hg ci -m 'copy A'
  created new head

  $ hg tglog
  @  2: 'copy A'
  |
  | o  1: 'B'
  |/
  o  0: 'A'
  
Copy is tracked:

  $ hg tlog -p --git -r tip
  2: 'copy A' 
  diff --git a/a b/a-copied
  copy from a
  copy to a-copied
  
Rebase the revision containing the copy:

  $ hg rebase -s 2 -d 1
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/b/.hg/strip-backup/*-backup.hg (glob)

  $ hg tglog
  @  2: 'copy A'
  |
  o  1: 'B'
  |
  o  0: 'A'
  
Copy is not lost:

  $ hg tlog -p --git -r tip
  2: 'copy A' 
  diff --git a/a b/a-copied
  copy from a
  copy to a-copied
  
  $ cd ..


Test rebase across repeating renames:

  $ hg init repo

  $ cd repo

  $ echo testing > file1.txt
  $ hg add file1.txt
  $ hg ci -m "Adding file1"

  $ hg rename file1.txt file2.txt
  $ hg ci -m "Rename file1 to file2"

  $ echo Unrelated change > unrelated.txt
  $ hg add unrelated.txt
  $ hg ci -m "Unrelated change"

  $ hg rename file2.txt file1.txt
  $ hg ci -m "Rename file2 back to file1"

  $ hg update -r -2
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved

  $ echo Another unrelated change >> unrelated.txt
  $ hg ci -m "Another unrelated change"
  created new head

  $ hg tglog
  @  4: 'Another unrelated change'
  |
  | o  3: 'Rename file2 back to file1'
  |/
  o  2: 'Unrelated change'
  |
  o  1: 'Rename file1 to file2'
  |
  o  0: 'Adding file1'
  

  $ hg rebase -s 4 -d 3
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/repo/.hg/strip-backup/*-backup.hg (glob)

  $ hg diff --stat -c .
   unrelated.txt |  1 +
   1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)