Mads Kiilerich <madski@unity3d.com> [Fri, 30 Jan 2015 18:51:20 +0100] rev 23972
convert: replace revision references in messages if they are >= short hashes
Convert will try to find references to revisions in commit messages and replace
them with references to the converted revision. It will take any string that
looks like a hash (and thus also decimal numbers) and look it up in the source
repo. If it finds anything, it will use that in the commit message instead.
It would do that for all hex digit sequences of 6 to 40 characters. That was
usually no problem for small repos where it was unlikely that there would be a
matching 6 'digit' hash prefix. It was also no problem on repos with less than
100000 changesets where numbers with 6 or more digits not would match any
revision number. With more than 100000 revisions random numbers in commit
messages would be replaced with a "random" hash. For example, 'handle 100000
requests' would be changed to to 'handle 9117c6 requests'. Convert could thus
not really be used on real repositories with more than 100000 changesets.
The default hash length shown by Mercurial is 12 'digits'. It is unexpected and
unwanted that convert by default tries to replace revision references that use
less than that amount of 'digits'.
To fix this, don't match strings that are less than the default hash size of 12
characters.
FUJIWARA Katsunori <foozy@lares.dti.ne.jp> [Fri, 30 Jan 2015 04:59:05 +0900] rev 23971
merge: mark .hgsubstate as possibly dirty before submerge for consistency
Before this patch, failure of updating subrepos may cause inconsistent
".hgsubstate". For example:
1. dirstate entry for ".hgsubstate" of the parent repo is filled
with valid size/date (via "hg state" or so)
2. "hg update" is invoked at the parent repo
3. ".hgsubstate" of the parent repo is updated on the filesystem as
a part of "g"(et) action in "merge.applyupdates"
4. it is assumed that size/date of ".hgsubstate" on the filesystem
aren't changed from ones at (1)
this is not so difficult condition, because just changing hash
ids (every ids are same in length) in ".hgsubstate" doesn't
change the file size of it
5. "subrepo.submerge()" is invoked to update subrepos
6. failure of updating in one of subrepos raises exception
(e.g. "untracked file differs")
7. "hg update" is aborted without updating dirstate of the parent repo
dirstate entry for ".hgsubstate" still holds size/date at (1)
Then, ".hgsubstate" of the parent repo is treated as "CLEAN"
unexpectedly, because updating ".hgsubstate" at (3) doesn't change
size/date of it on the filesystem: see assumption at (4).
This inconsistent ".hgsubstate" status causes unexpected behavior, for
example:
- "hg revert" forgets to revert ".hgsubstate"
- "hg update" misunderstands that (not yet updated) subrepos diverge
(then, it shows the prompt to confirm user's decision)
To avoid inconsistent ".hgsubstate" status above, this patch marks
".hgsubstate" as possibly dirty before "submerge" invocation.
"normallookup"-ed (= dirty) dirstate should be written out, even if
processing is aborted by failure.
This patch marks ".hgsubstate" as possibly dirty before "submerge",
also when it is removed or merged while merging, for safety. This
should prevent Mercurial from misunderstanding inconsistent
".hgsubstate" as clean.
To satisfy conditions at (1) and (4) above, this patch uses "hg status
--config debug.dirstate.delaywrite=2" (to fill valid size/date into
dirstate) and "touch" (to fix date of the file).
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@fb.com> [Tue, 27 Jan 2015 12:33:56 +0000] rev 23970
rebase: ensure rebase revision remains visible (issue4504)
Before this changeset rebase was getting very confused if any revision in the
rebase set became hidden. This was fairly easy to achieve if a rebased revision
was made visible by the working copy location. The rebase process would update
somewhere else and the revision would become hidden.
To work around this issue, we ensure rebased revisions remain visible for the
whole process.
This is a simple change suitable for stable. More subtle usage of unfiltered
repository in rebase may solve this issue more cleanly.