Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> [Mon, 29 Sep 2014 17:23:38 -0500] rev 22578
merge with stable
Anton Shestakov <engored@ya.ru> [Sat, 27 Sep 2014 21:59:55 +0900] rev 22577
hgweb: refresh hgweb.repo on phase change (issue4061)
Make hgweb.refresh() also look at phaseroots file (in addition to 00changelog.i
file) and reload the repo when os.stat returns different mtime or size than
cached, signifying the file was modified.
This way if user changes phase of a changeset (secret <-> draft), there's no
need to restart hg serve to see the change.
Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> [Mon, 29 Sep 2014 16:42:12 -0500] rev 22576
help: fix typo in log examples
Mads Kiilerich <madski@unity3d.com> [Fri, 26 Sep 2014 02:19:48 +0200] rev 22575
ssl: on OS X, use a dummy cert to trick Python/OpenSSL to use system CA certs
This will give PKI-secure behaviour out of the box, without any configuration.
Setting web.cacerts to any value or empty will disable this trick.
This dummy cert trick only works on OS X 10.6+, but 10.5 had Python 2.5 which
didn't have certificate validation at all.
Mads Kiilerich <madski@unity3d.com> [Fri, 26 Sep 2014 02:19:47 +0200] rev 22574
ssl: refactor sslkwargs - move things around a bit, preparing for next change
Durham Goode <durham@fb.com> [Fri, 19 Sep 2014 18:43:53 -0700] rev 22573
revert: special case 'hg revert --all'
On large repos, hg revert --all can take over 13 seconds. This is mainly due to
it walking the tree three times: once to find the list of files in the
dirstate, once to find the list of files in the target, and once to compute the
status from the dirstate to the target.
This optimizes the hg revert --all case to only require the final status. This
speeds it up to 1.3 seconds or so (with hgwatchman enabled).
Further optimizations could be done for the -r NODE and pattern cases, but they
are significantly more complex.
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sun, 28 Sep 2014 17:21:38 +0900] rev 22572
test-commandserver: make runcommand message bolder
It seems ' runcommand' is difficult to distinguish from command output.
'*** runcommand' is slightly better.