scmutil: consistently return subrepos relative to ctx1 from itersubrepos()
Previously, if a subrepo was added in ctx2 and then compared to another without
it (ctx1), the subrepo for ctx2 was returned amongst all of the ctx1 based
subrepos, since no subrepo exists in ctx1 to replace it in the 'subpaths' dict.
The two callers of this, basectx.status() and cmdutil.diffordiffstat(), both
compare the yielded subrepo against ctx2, and thus saw no changes when ctx2's
subrepo was returned. The tests here previously didn't mention 's/a' for the
'p1()' case.
This appears to have been a known issue, because some diffordiffstat() comments
mention that the subpath disappeared, and "the best we can do is ignore it". I
originally ran into the issue with some custom convert code to flatten a tree of
subrepos causing hg.putcommit() to abort, but this new behavior seems like the
correct status and diff behavior regardless. (The abort in convert isn't
something users will see, because convert doesn't currently support subrepos in
the official repo.)
http://mercurial.selenic.com/bts/issue1502
Initialize repository
$ hg init foo
$ touch foo/a && hg -R foo commit -A -m "added a"
adding a
$ hg clone foo foo1
updating to branch default
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ echo "bar" > foo1/a && hg -R foo1 commit -m "edit a in foo1"
$ echo "hi" > foo/a && hg -R foo commit -m "edited a foo"
$ hg -R foo1 pull -u
pulling from $TESTTMP/foo (glob)
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files (+1 heads)
not updating: not a linear update
(merge or update --check to force update)
$ hg -R foo1 book branchy
$ hg -R foo1 book
* branchy 1:e3e522925eff
Pull. Bookmark should not jump to new head.
$ echo "there" >> foo/a && hg -R foo commit -m "edited a again"
$ hg -R foo1 pull
pulling from $TESTTMP/foo (glob)
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files
(run 'hg update' to get a working copy)
$ hg -R foo1 book
* branchy 1:e3e522925eff