Mercurial > hg-stable
view contrib/dockerlib.sh @ 29021:92d37fb3f1aa stable
verify: don't init subrepo when missing one is referenced (issue5128) (API)
Initializing a subrepo when one doesn't exist is the right thing to do when the
parent is being updated, but in few other cases. Unfortunately, there isn't
enough context in the subrepo module to distinguish this case. This same issue
can be caused with other subrepo aware commands, so there is a general issue
here beyond the scope of this fix.
A simpler attempt I tried was to add an '_updating' boolean to localrepo, and
set/clear it around the call to mergemod.update() in hg.updaterepo(). That
mostly worked, but doesn't handle the case where archive will clone the subrepo
if it is missing. (I vaguely recall that there may be other commands that will
clone if needed like this, but certainly not all do. It seems both handy, and a
bit surprising for what should be a read only operation. It might be nice if
all commands did this consistently, but we probably need Angel's subrepo caching
first, to not make a mess of the working directory.)
I originally handled 'Exception' in order to pick up the Aborts raised in
subrepo.state(), but this turns out to be unnecessary because that is called
once and cached by ctx.sub() when iterating the subrepos.
It was suggested in the bug discussion to skip looking at the subrepo links
unless -S is specified. I don't really like that idea because missing a subrepo
or (less likely, but worse) a corrupt .hgsubstate is a problem of the parent
repo when checking out a revision. The -S option seems like a better fit for
functionality that would recurse into each subrepo and do a full verification.
Ultimately, the default value for 'allowcreate' should probably be flipped, but
since the default behavior was to allow creation, this is less risky for now.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 27 Apr 2016 22:45:52 -0400 |
parents | cea1473ba468 |
children | a3ac1ea611ce |
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#!/bin/sh -eu # This function exists to set up the DOCKER variable and verify that # it's the binary we expect. It also verifies that the docker service # is running on the system and we can talk to it. function checkdocker() { if which docker.io >> /dev/null 2>&1 ; then DOCKER=docker.io elif which docker >> /dev/null 2>&1 ; then DOCKER=docker else echo "Error: docker must be installed" exit 1 fi $DOCKER -h 2> /dev/null | grep -q Jansens && { echo "Error: $DOCKER is the Docking System Tray - install docker.io instead"; exit 1; } $DOCKER version | grep -Eq "^Client( version)?:" || { echo "Error: unexpected output from \"$DOCKER version\""; exit 1; } $DOCKER version | grep -Eq "^Server( version)?:" || { echo "Error: could not get docker server version - check it is running and your permissions"; exit 1; } } # Construct a container and leave its name in $CONTAINER for future use. function initcontainer() { [ "$1" ] || { echo "Error: platform name must be specified"; exit 1; } DFILE="$ROOTDIR/contrib/docker/$1" [ -f "$DFILE" ] || { echo "Error: docker file $DFILE not found"; exit 1; } CONTAINER="hg-dockerrpm-$1" DBUILDUSER=build ( cat $DFILE if [ $(uname) = "Darwin" ] ; then # The builder is using boot2docker on OS X, so we're going to # *guess* the uid of the user inside the VM that is actually # running docker. This is *very likely* to fail at some point. echo RUN useradd $DBUILDUSER -u 1000 else echo RUN groupadd $DBUILDUSER -g `id -g` -o echo RUN useradd $DBUILDUSER -u `id -u` -g $DBUILDUSER -o fi ) | $DOCKER build --tag $CONTAINER - }