templater: pass (context, mapping) down to unwraphybrid()
See the subsequent patches for why.
I initially thought it would be wrong to pass a mapping to flatten() and
stringify() since these functions may be applied to a tree of generators,
where each node should be bound to the mapping when it was evaluated. But,
actually that isn't a problem. If an intermediate node has to override a
mapping dict, it can do on unwraphybrid() and yield "unwrapped" generator
of byte strings:
"{f(g(v))}" # literal template example.
^^^^ # g() want to override a mapping, so it returns a wrapped
# object 'G{V}' with partial mapping 'lm' attached.
^^^^^^^ # f() stringifies 'G{V}', starting from a mapping 'm'.
# when unwrapping 'G{}', it updates 'm' with 'lm', and
# passes it to 'V'.
This structure is important for the formatter (and the hgweb) to build a
static template keyword, which can't access a mapping dict until evaluation
phase.
$ hg init
$ echo a > a
$ hg ci -Ama
adding a
$ hg an a
0: a
$ hg --config ui.strict=False an a
0: a
$ echo "[ui]" >> $HGRCPATH
$ echo "strict=True" >> $HGRCPATH
$ hg an a
hg: unknown command 'an'
Mercurial Distributed SCM
basic commands:
add add the specified files on the next commit
annotate show changeset information by line for each file
clone make a copy of an existing repository
commit commit the specified files or all outstanding changes
diff diff repository (or selected files)
export dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets
forget forget the specified files on the next commit
init create a new repository in the given directory
log show revision history of entire repository or files
merge merge another revision into working directory
pull pull changes from the specified source
push push changes to the specified destination
remove remove the specified files on the next commit
serve start stand-alone webserver
status show changed files in the working directory
summary summarize working directory state
update update working directory (or switch revisions)
(use 'hg help' for the full list of commands or 'hg -v' for details)
[255]
$ hg annotate a
0: a
should succeed - up is an alias, not an abbreviation
$ hg up
0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved