Mercurial > hg-stable
view contrib/undumprevlog @ 33198:439b4d005b4a
tests: demonstrate inconsistencies with dirty state in various commands
Not only is the output of these commands inconsistent with respect to each
other when a file is deleted, they are internally inconsistent depending upon
whether the deleted file is in the top level repo or a subrepo. It seemed
easier to show the problems, rather than describe them. The original goal was
to fix the summary command with respect to deleted files. I haven't fixed any
of the other issues yet, in case anybody believes the current subrepo behavior
is correct.
I think a natural understanding of clean/dirty is that they are two opposite
values of a single binary repo state. If `hg update --clean -r .` changes a
file, then naturally that repo was dirty, and `hg update --check` should have
blocked it. Deleted files are special, in that they don't block a commit. But
they make the filesystem content not the same as a clean checkout.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
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date | Wed, 28 Jun 2017 21:30:46 -0400 |
parents | 8d3e8c8c9049 |
children | 5d9890d8ca77 |
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#!/usr/bin/env python # Undump a dump from dumprevlog # $ hg init # $ undumprevlog < repo.dump from __future__ import absolute_import import sys from mercurial import ( node, revlog, transaction, util, vfs as vfsmod, ) for fp in (sys.stdin, sys.stdout, sys.stderr): util.setbinary(fp) opener = vfsmod.vfs('.', False) tr = transaction.transaction(sys.stderr.write, opener, {'store': opener}, "undump.journal") while True: l = sys.stdin.readline() if not l: break if l.startswith("file:"): f = l[6:-1] r = revlog.revlog(opener, f) print f elif l.startswith("node:"): n = node.bin(l[6:-1]) elif l.startswith("linkrev:"): lr = int(l[9:-1]) elif l.startswith("parents:"): p = l[9:-1].split() p1 = node.bin(p[0]) p2 = node.bin(p[1]) elif l.startswith("length:"): length = int(l[8:-1]) sys.stdin.readline() # start marker d = sys.stdin.read(length) sys.stdin.readline() # end marker r.addrevision(d, tr, lr, p1, p2) tr.close()