Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/autodiff.py @ 28103:7d852bb47b0a
merge: give priority to "not at head" failures for bare 'hg merge'
We refuse to pick a destination for a bare 'hg merge' if the working copy is not
at head. This is meant to prevent strange merge from user who forget to update.
(Moreover, such merge does not reduce actually the number of heads)
However, we were doing that as the last possible failure type. So user were
recommended to merge with an explicit head (from this bad location) if the
branch had too many heads.
We now make "not on branch heads" class of failure the first things to check
and fail on. The one test that change was actually trying to check for these
failure (and did not). The new test output is correct.
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 08 Feb 2016 14:55:58 +0100 |
parents | 3b517f2a3989 |
children | 46ba2cdda476 |
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# Extension dedicated to test patch.diff() upgrade modes from __future__ import absolute_import from mercurial import ( cmdutil, error, patch, scmutil, ) 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 error.Abort('losing data for %s' % fn) else: raise error.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))