discovery: drop findoutgoing and simplify findcommonincoming's api
This is a long desired cleanup and paves the way for new discovery.
To specify subsets for bundling changes, all code should use the heads
of the desired subset ("heads") and the heads of the common subset
("common") to be excluded from the bundled set. These can be used
revlog.findmissing instead of revlog.nodesbetween.
This fixes an actual bug exposed by the change in test-bundle-r.t
where we try to bundle a changeset while specifying that said changeset
is to be assumed already present in the target. This used to still
bundle the changeset. It no longer does. This is similar to the bugs
fixed by the recent switch to heads/common for incoming/pull.
# simple script to be used in hooks
#
# put something like this in the repo .hg/hgrc:
#
# [hooks]
# changegroup = python "$TESTDIR"/printenv.py <hookname> [exit] [output]
#
# - <hookname> is a mandatory argument (e.g. "changegroup")
# - [exit] is the exit code of the hook (default: 0)
# - [output] is the name of the output file (default: use sys.stdout)
# the file will be opened in append mode.
#
import os
import sys
try:
import msvcrt
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdin.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
msvcrt.setmode(sys.stderr.fileno(), os.O_BINARY)
except ImportError:
pass
exitcode = 0
out = sys.stdout
name = sys.argv[1]
if len(sys.argv) > 2:
exitcode = int(sys.argv[2])
if len(sys.argv) > 3:
out = open(sys.argv[3], "ab")
# variables with empty values may not exist on all platforms, filter
# them now for portability sake.
env = [k for k, v in os.environ.iteritems()
if k.startswith("HG_") and v]
env.sort()
out.write("%s hook: " % name)
for v in env:
out.write("%s=%s " % (v, os.environ[v]))
out.write("\n")
out.close()
sys.exit(exitcode)