templates: rename `Last change' column in hgwebdir repository list.
This patch changes column headers in the templates that previously
said `Last change' to `Last modified'. Neither code nor functionality
are changed other than that.
For some time now, I have been annoyed by the fact the `Last change'
column didn't list the age of the youngest changeset in the
repository, or at least tip. It just occurred to me that this is
because the wording is slightly misleading; what the column in fact
lists is when the repository was last *modified*, that is, when
changesets was last added or removed from it.
The word `change' can be understood as referring to the changeset
itself. Using `changed' would be ever so slightly less
amigous. However, the standard nomenclature in this case is
`modification date' and `Last modified', which is incidentally entirely
unambigous. Hence, `Last modified' is the wording used.
#!/bin/sh
"$TESTDIR/hghave" inotify || exit 80
hg init repo1
cd repo1
touch a b c d e
mkdir dir
mkdir dir/bar
touch dir/x dir/y dir/bar/foo
hg ci -Am m
cd ..
hg clone repo1 repo2
echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH
echo "inotify=" >> $HGRCPATH
cd repo2
echo b >> a
# check that daemon started automatically works correctly
# and make sure that inotify.pidfile works
hg --config "inotify.pidfile=../hg2.pid" status
# make sure that pidfile worked. Output should be silent.
kill `cat ../hg2.pid`
cd ../repo1
echo % inserve
hg inserve -d --pid-file=hg.pid
cat hg.pid >> "$DAEMON_PIDS"
# let the daemon finish its stuff
sleep 1
echo % cannot start, already bound
hg inserve
# issue907
hg status
echo % clean
hg status -c
echo % all
hg status -A
echo '% path patterns'
echo x > dir/x
hg status .
hg status dir
cd dir
hg status .
cd ..
#issue 1375
#Testing that we can remove a folder and then add a file with the same name
echo % issue 1375
mkdir h
echo h > h/h
hg ci -Am t
hg rm h
echo h >h
hg add h
hg status
hg ci -m0
# Test for issue1735: inotify watches files in .hg/merge
hg st
echo a > a
hg ci -Am a
hg st
echo b >> a
hg ci -m ab
hg st
echo c >> a
hg st
hg up 0
hg st
HGMERGE=internal:local hg up
hg st
# Test for 1844: "hg ci folder" will not commit all changes beneath "folder"
mkdir 1844
echo a > 1844/foo
hg add 1844
hg ci -m 'working'
echo b >> 1844/foo
hg ci 1844 -m 'broken'
kill `cat hg.pid`