tests/test-transplant
author Henrik Stuart <henrik.stuart@edlund.dk>
Sat, 23 May 2009 17:02:49 +0200
changeset 8562 e3495c399006
parent 8518 3f4f14eab085
child 8811 8b35b08724eb
permissions -rwxr-xr-x
named branches: server branchmap wire protocol support (issue736) The repository command, 'branchmap', returns a dictionary, branchname -> [branchheads], and will be implemented for localrepo, httprepo and sshrepo. The following wire format is used for returning data: branchname1 branch1head2 branch1head2 ... branchname2 ... ... Branch names are URL encoded to escape white space, and branch heads are sent as hex encoded node ids. All branches and all their heads are sent. The background and motivation for this command is the desire for a richer named branch semantics when pushing changesets. The details are explained in the original proposal which is included below. 1. BACKGROUND The algorithm currently implemented in Mercurial only considers the graph theoretical heads when determining whether new heads are created, rather than using the branch heads as a count (the algorithm considers a branch head effectively closed when it is merged into another branch or a new named branch is started from that point onward). Our particular problem with the algorithm is that we'd like to see the following case working without forcing a push: Upsteam has: (0:dev) ---- (1:dev) \ `--- (2:stable) Someone merges stable into dev: (0:dev) ---- (1:dev) ------(3:dev) \ / `--- (2:stable) --------´ This can be pushed without --force (as it should). Now someone else does some coding on stable (a bug fix, say): (0:dev) ---- (1:dev) ------(3:dev) \ / `--- (2:stable) ---------´---------(4:stable) This time we need --force to push. We allow this to be pushed without using --force by getting all the remote branch heads (by extending the wire protocol with a new function). We would, furthermore, also prefer if it is impossible to push a new branch without --force (or a later --newbranch option so --force isn't shoe-horned into too many disparate functions, if need be), except of course in the case where the remote repository is empty. This is what our patches accomplish. 2. ALTERNATIVES We have, of course, considered some alternatives to reconstructing enough information to decide whether we are creating new remote branch heads, before we added the new wire protocol command. 2.1. LOOKUP ON REMOTE The main alternative is to use the information from remote.heads() and remote.lookup() to try to reconstruct enough graph information to decide whether we are creating new heads. This is not adequate as illustrated below. Remember that each lookup is typically a request-response pair over SSH or HTTP(S). If we have a simple repository at the remote end like this: (0:dev) ---- (1:dev) ---- (3:stable) \ `--- (2:dev) then remote.heads() will yield [2, 3]. Assume we have nodes [0, 1, 2] locally and want to create a new node, 4:dev, as a descendant from (1:dev), which should be OK as 1:dev is a branch head. If we do remote.lookup('dev') we will get [2]. Thus, we can get information about whether a branch exists on the remote server or not, but this does not solve our problem of figuring out whether we are creating new heads or not. Pushing 4:dev ought to be OK, since after the push, we still only have two heads on branch a. Using remote.lookup() and remote.heads() is thus not adequate to consistently decide whether we are creating new remote heads (e.g. in this situation the latter would never return 1:dev). 2.2. USING INCOMING TO RECONSTRUCT THE GRAPH An alternative would be to use information equivalent to hg incoming to get the full remote graph in addition to the local graph. To do this, we would have to get a changegroup(subset) bundle representing the remote end (which may be a substantial amount of data), getting the branch heads from an instantiated bundlerepository, deleting the bundle, and finally, we can compute the prepush logic. While this is backwards compatible, it will cause a possibly substantial slowdown of the push command as it first needs to pull in all changes. 3. FURTHER ARGUMENTS IN FAVOUR OF THE BRANCHMAP WIRE-PROTOCOL EXTENSION Currently, the commands incoming and pull, work based on the tip of a given branch if used with "-r branchname", making it hard to get all revisions of a certain branch only (if it has multiple heads). This can be solved by requesting the remote's branchheads and letting the revisions to be used with the command be these heads. This can be done by extending the commands with a new option, e.g.: hg pull -b branchname which will be turned into the equivalent of: hg pull -r branchhead1 -r branchhead2 -r branchhead3 We have a simple follow-up patch that can do this ready as well (although not submitted yet as it is pending the acceptance of the branch patch). 4. WRAP-UP We generally find that the branchmap wire protocol extension can provide better named branch support to Mercurial. Currently, some things, like the initial push scenario in this mail, are fairly counter-intuitive, and the more often you have to force push, the more it is likely you will get a lot of spurious and unnecessary merge nodes. Also, restricting incoming and pull to all changes on a branch rather than changes on the tip-most head would be a sensible extension to making named branches a first class citizen in Mercurial. Currently, named branches sometimes feel like a late-coming unwanted step-child. We have run it in a production environment for a while, with fewer multiple heads occurring in our repositories and fewer confused users as a result. Also, it fixes the long-standing issue 736. Co-contributor: Sune Foldager <cryo@cyanite.org>

#!/bin/sh

cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH
[extensions]
transplant=
EOF

hg init t
cd t
echo r1 > r1
hg ci -Amr1 -d'0 0'
echo r2 > r2
hg ci -Amr2 -d'1 0'
hg up 0

echo b1 > b1
hg ci -Amb1 -d '0 0'
echo b2 > b2
hg ci -Amb2 -d '1 0'
echo b3 > b3
hg ci -Amb3 -d '2 0'

hg log --template '{rev} {parents} {desc}\n'

hg clone . ../rebase
cd ../rebase

hg up -C 1
echo '% rebase b onto r1'
hg transplant -a -b tip
hg log --template '{rev} {parents} {desc}\n'

hg clone ../t ../prune
cd ../prune

hg up -C 1
echo '% rebase b onto r1, skipping b2'
hg transplant -a -b tip -p 3
hg log --template '{rev} {parents} {desc}\n'

echo '% remote transplant'
hg clone -r 1 ../t ../remote
cd ../remote
hg transplant --log -s ../t 2 4
hg log --template '{rev} {parents} {desc}\n'

echo '% skip previous transplants'
hg transplant -s ../t -a -b 4
hg log --template '{rev} {parents} {desc}\n'

echo '% skip local changes transplanted to the source'
echo b4 > b4
hg ci -Amb4 -d '3 0'
hg clone ../t ../pullback
cd ../pullback
hg transplant -s ../remote -a -b tip

echo '% remote transplant with pull'
hg -R ../t serve -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=../t.pid
cat ../t.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS

hg clone -r 0 ../t ../rp
cd ../rp
hg transplant -s http://localhost:$HGPORT/ 2 4
hg log --template '{rev} {parents} {desc}\n'

echo '% transplant --continue'
hg init ../tc
cd ../tc
cat <<EOF > foo
foo
bar
baz
EOF
echo toremove > toremove
hg ci -Amfoo
cat <<EOF > foo
foo2
bar2
baz2
EOF
rm toremove
echo added > added
hg ci -Amfoo2
echo bar > bar
hg ci -Ambar
echo bar2 >> bar
hg ci -mbar2
hg up 0
echo foobar > foo
hg ci -mfoobar
hg transplant 1:3
# transplant -c shouldn't use an old changeset
hg up -C
rm added
hg transplant 1
hg transplant --continue
hg transplant 1:3
hg locate
cd ..

# Test transplant --merge (issue 1111)
echo % test transplant merge
hg init t1111
cd t1111
echo a > a
hg ci -Am adda
echo b >> a
hg ci -m appendb
echo c >> a
hg ci -m appendc
hg up -C 0
echo d >> a
hg ci -m appendd
echo % tranplant
hg transplant -m 1
cd ..

echo '% test transplant into empty repository'
hg init empty
cd empty
hg transplant -s ../t -b tip -a
cd ..

echo '% test filter'
hg init filter
cd filter
cat <<'EOF' >test-filter
#!/bin/sh
sed 's/r1/r2/' $1 > $1.new
mv $1.new $1
EOF
chmod +x test-filter
hg transplant -s ../t -b tip -a --filter ./test-filter |\
    sed 's/filtering.*/filtering/g'
hg log --template '{rev} {parents} {desc}\n'