Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/test-dispatch.py @ 33331:4bae3c117b57
scmutil: make cleanupnodes delete divergent bookmarks
cleanupnodes takes care of bookmark movement, and bookmark movement could
cause bookmark divergent resolution as a side effect. This patch adds such
bookmark divergent resolution logic so future rebase migration will be
easier.
The revset is carefully written to be equivalent to what rebase does today.
Although I think it might make sense to remove divergent bookmarks more
aggressively, for example:
F book@1
|
E book@2
|
| D book
| |
| C
|/
B book@3
|
A
When rebase -s C -d E, "book@1" will be removed, "book@3" will be kept,
and the end result is:
D book
|
C
|
F
|
E book@2 (?)
|
B book@3
|
A
The question is should we keep book@2? The current logic keeps it. If we
choose not to (makes some sense to me), the "deleterevs" revset could be
simplified to "newnode % oldnode".
For now, I just make it compatible with the existing behavior. If we want to
make the "deleterevs" revset simpler, we can always do it in the future.
author | Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 26 Jun 2017 13:13:51 -0700 |
parents | 1d9d29d4813a |
children | f0c94af0d70d |
line wrap: on
line source
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import os from mercurial import ( dispatch, ) def testdispatch(cmd): """Simple wrapper around dispatch.dispatch() Prints command and result value, but does not handle quoting. """ print("running: %s" % (cmd,)) req = dispatch.request(cmd.split()) result = dispatch.dispatch(req) print("result: %r" % (result,)) testdispatch("init test1") os.chdir('test1') # create file 'foo', add and commit f = open('foo', 'wb') f.write('foo\n') f.close() testdispatch("add foo") testdispatch("commit -m commit1 -d 2000-01-01 foo") # append to file 'foo' and commit f = open('foo', 'ab') f.write('bar\n') f.close() testdispatch("commit -m commit2 -d 2000-01-02 foo") # check 88803a69b24 (fancyopts modified command table) testdispatch("log -r 0") testdispatch("log -r tip")