remotenames: introduce new template keywords for remotenames
This patch introduces three new template keywords 'remotenames',
'remotebookmarks', 'remotebranches' to show remotenames, remotebookmarks and
remotebranches associated to a changeset.
This is a part of moving hgremotenames extension to core. The remotenames
template keyword was present in the extension and the rest of the two are not
present in the hgremotenames extension and are introduced in this patch.
hgremotenames: https://bitbucket.org/seanfarley/hgremotenames
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1759
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""
Tests the behavior of filelog w.r.t. data starting with '\1\n'
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
from mercurial.node import (
hex,
nullid,
)
from mercurial import (
hg,
ui as uimod,
)
myui = uimod.ui.load()
repo = hg.repository(myui, path='.', create=True)
fl = repo.file('foobar')
def addrev(text, renamed=False):
if renamed:
# data doesn't matter. Just make sure filelog.renamed() returns True
meta = {'copyrev': hex(nullid), 'copy': 'bar'}
else:
meta = {}
lock = t = None
try:
lock = repo.lock()
t = repo.transaction('commit')
node = fl.add(text, meta, t, 0, nullid, nullid)
return node
finally:
if t:
t.close()
if lock:
lock.release()
def error(text):
print('ERROR: ' + text)
textwith = '\1\nfoo'
without = 'foo'
node = addrev(textwith)
if not textwith == fl.read(node):
error('filelog.read for data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.cmp(node, textwith) or not fl.cmp(node, without):
error('filelog.cmp for data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.size(0) != len(textwith):
error('FIXME: This is a known failure of filelog.size for data starting '
'with \\1\\n')
node = addrev(textwith, renamed=True)
if not textwith == fl.read(node):
error('filelog.read for a renaming + data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.cmp(node, textwith) or not fl.cmp(node, without):
error('filelog.cmp for a renaming + data starting with \\1\\n')
if fl.size(1) != len(textwith):
error('filelog.size for a renaming + data starting with \\1\\n')
print('OK.')