largefiles: allow the archiving of largefiles to be disabled
There are currently no users of this, but it is a necessary step before
converting extdiff to use archive. It may be useful to add an argument to
extdiff in the future and allow largefiles to be diffed, but archiving
largefiles can have significant overhead and may not be very diffable, so
archiving them by default seems wrong.
It is a mystery to me why the lfstatus attribute needs to be set on the
unfiltered repo. However if it is set on the filtered repo instead (and the
filtered repo is passed to the original command), the lfstatus attribute is
False in the overrides for archival.archive() and hgsubrepo.archive() when
invoking the archive command. This smells like the buggy status behavior (see
67d63ec85eb7, which was reverted in df463ca0adef). Neither the status nor
summary commands have this weird behavior in their respective overrides.
# Extension dedicated to test patch.diff() upgrade modes
#
#
from mercurial import cmdutil, scmutil, patch, util
cmdtable = {}
command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable)
@command('autodiff',
[('', 'git', '', 'git upgrade mode (yes/no/auto/warn/abort)')],
'[OPTION]... [FILE]...')
def autodiff(ui, repo, *pats, **opts):
diffopts = patch.difffeatureopts(ui, opts)
git = opts.get('git', 'no')
brokenfiles = set()
losedatafn = None
if git in ('yes', 'no'):
diffopts.git = git == 'yes'
diffopts.upgrade = False
elif git == 'auto':
diffopts.git = False
diffopts.upgrade = True
elif git == 'warn':
diffopts.git = False
diffopts.upgrade = True
def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs):
brokenfiles.add(fn)
return True
elif git == 'abort':
diffopts.git = False
diffopts.upgrade = True
def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs):
raise util.Abort('losing data for %s' % fn)
else:
raise util.Abort('--git must be yes, no or auto')
node1, node2 = scmutil.revpair(repo, [])
m = scmutil.match(repo[node2], pats, opts)
it = patch.diff(repo, node1, node2, match=m, opts=diffopts,
losedatafn=losedatafn)
for chunk in it:
ui.write(chunk)
for fn in sorted(brokenfiles):
ui.write(('data lost for: %s\n' % fn))