import: use dirstateguard instead of dirstate.invalidate
Before this patch, "commands.import()" uses "dirstate.invalidate()" as
a kind of "restore .hg/dirstate to the original status" during a failure.
But it just discards changes in memory, and doesn't actually restore
".hg/dirstate". Then, it can't work as expected, if "dirstate.write()"
is executed while processing.
This patch uses "dirstateguard" instead of "dirstate.invalidate()" to
restore ".hg/dirstate" at failure even if "dirstate.write()" is
executed before failure.
This patch also removes "beginparentchage()" and "endparentchange()",
because "dirstateguard" makes them useless, too.
This is a part of preparations to fix the issue that the recent (in
memory) dirstate isn't visible to external process (e.g. "precommit"
hook).
import struct
from mercurial import bdiff, mpatch
def test1(a, b):
d = bdiff.bdiff(a, b)
c = a
if d:
c = mpatch.patches(a, [d])
if c != b:
print "***", repr(a), repr(b)
print "bad:"
print repr(c)[:200]
print repr(d)
def test(a, b):
print "***", repr(a), repr(b)
test1(a, b)
test1(b, a)
test("a\nc\n\n\n\n", "a\nb\n\n\n")
test("a\nb\nc\n", "a\nc\n")
test("", "")
test("a\nb\nc", "a\nb\nc")
test("a\nb\nc\nd\n", "a\nd\n")
test("a\nb\nc\nd\n", "a\nc\ne\n")
test("a\nb\nc\n", "a\nc\n")
test("a\n", "c\na\nb\n")
test("a\n", "")
test("a\n", "b\nc\n")
test("a\n", "c\na\n")
test("", "adjfkjdjksdhfksj")
test("", "ab")
test("", "abc")
test("a", "a")
test("ab", "ab")
test("abc", "abc")
test("a\n", "a\n")
test("a\nb", "a\nb")
#issue1295
def showdiff(a, b):
bin = bdiff.bdiff(a, b)
pos = 0
while pos < len(bin):
p1, p2, l = struct.unpack(">lll", bin[pos:pos + 12])
pos += 12
print p1, p2, repr(bin[pos:pos + l])
pos += l
showdiff("x\n\nx\n\nx\n\nx\n\nz\n", "x\n\nx\n\ny\n\nx\n\nx\n\nz\n")
showdiff("x\n\nx\n\nx\n\nx\n\nz\n", "x\n\nx\n\ny\n\nx\n\ny\n\nx\n\nz\n")
print "done"
def testfixws(a, b, allws):
c = bdiff.fixws(a, allws)
if c != b:
print "*** fixws", repr(a), repr(b), allws
print "got:"
print repr(c)
testfixws(" \ta\r b\t\n", "ab\n", 1)
testfixws(" \ta\r b\t\n", " a b\n", 0)
testfixws("", "", 1)
testfixws("", "", 0)
print "done"