Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Tue, 03 May 2016 14:24:00 +0900] rev 29960
log: drop hack to fix order of revset (issue5100)
Specify ordered=revset.followorder instead.
This patch effectively backs out c407583cf5f6. revs.sort(reverse=True)
is replaced by revs.reverse() because the matcher should no longer reorder
revisions.
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Tue, 03 May 2016 14:18:28 +0900] rev 29959
revset: add option to make matcher takes the ordering of the input set
This allows us to evaluate match(subset) as if 'subset & expr', which will
be the complete fix for the issue5100.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Mon, 19 Sep 2016 09:14:35 -0700] rev 29958
strip: don't use "full" and "partial" to describe bundles
The partial bundle is not a subset of the full bundle, and the full
bundle is not full in any way that i see. The most obvious
interpretation of "full" I can think of is that it has all commits
back to the null revision, but that is not what the "full" bundle
is. The "full" bundle is simply a backup of what the user asked us to
strip (unless --no-backup). The "partial" bundle contains the
revisions we temporarily stripped because they had higher revision
numbers that some commit that the user asked us to strip.
The "full" bundle is already called "backup" in the code, so let's use
that in user-facing messages too. Let's call the "partial" bundle
"temporary" in the code.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Mon, 19 Sep 2016 09:14:32 -0700] rev 29957
strip: clarify that user action is required to recover temp bundle
If strip fails when applying the temporary bundle, the commits in the
temporary bundle have not yet been applied, so the user will almost
definitely want to apply the bundle. We should be more clear to the
user about that than our current "partial bundle stored in...".
Note that we will probably not be able to recover it automatically,
since whatever made it fail (e.g. a hook) will most likely make it
fail again. We need to give control back to the user to fix the
problem before trying again.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Thu, 15 Sep 2016 09:45:29 -0700] rev 29956
strip: report both bundle files in case of exception (issue5368)
If strip fails while recovering the temporary bundle (e.g. because a
hook fails), we tell the user only about the backup bundle, not about
the temporary bundle. Since the user did not ask to strip the commits
in the temporary bundle, that's the more important bundle to mention,
so let's do that (and also mention the backup bundle as usual).
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Thu, 15 Sep 2016 10:18:56 -0700] rev 29955
strip: simplify some repeated conditions
We check "if saveheads or savebases" in several places to see if we
should or have created a bundle of the changesets to apply after
truncating the revlogs. One of the conditions is actually just "if
saveheads", but since there can't be savebases without saveheads, that
is effectively the same condition. It seems simpler to check only once
and from then on see if we created the file.
Mathias De Maré <mathias.demare@gmail.com> [Mon, 29 Aug 2016 07:07:15 +0200] rev 29954
config: add template support
V2:
- Limit escaping to plain formatting only
- Use the formatter consistently (no more ui.debug)
- Always include 'name' and 'value'
V3:
- Always convert 'value' to string (this also makes sure we handle functions)
- Keep real debug message as ui.debug for now
- Add additional tests.
Note: I'm not quite sure about the best approach to handling
the 'print the full config' case.
For me, it printed the 'ui.promptecho' key at the end.
I went with globs there as that at least tests the json display reliably.
Example output:
[
{
"name": "ui.username",
"source": "/home/mathias/.hgrc:2",
"value": "Mathias De Maré <mathias.demare@gmail.com>"
}
]
Mathias De Maré <mathias.demare@gmail.com> [Mon, 29 Aug 2016 17:19:09 +0200] rev 29953
formatter: introduce isplain() to replace (the inverse of) __nonzero__() (API)
V2: also remove and replace __nonzero__
Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> [Tue, 30 Aug 2016 15:55:07 -0400] rev 29952
diffopts: notice a negated boolean flag in diffopts
This means that if you have git-diffs enabled by default (pretty
common) and you hit the rare (but real) case where a git-diff breaks
patch(1) or some other tool, you can easily disable it by just
specifying --no-git on the command line.
I feel a little bad about the isinstance() check, but some values in
diffopts are not booleans and so we need to preserve false iff the
flag is a boolean flag: failing to do this means we end up with empty
string defaults for flags clobbering meaningful values from the [diff]
section in hgrc.
Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> [Tue, 13 Sep 2016 22:57:57 -0400] rev 29951
flags: allow specifying --no-boolean-flag on the command line (BC)
This makes it much easier to enable some anti-foot-shooting features
(like update --check) by default, because now all boolean flags can be
explicitly disabled on the command line without having to use HGPLAIN
or similar. Flags which don't deserve this treatment can be removed
from consideration by adding them to the nevernegate set in fancyopts.
This doesn't make it any easier to identify when a flag is set: opts
still always gets filled in, either with the user-specified flag value
or with the default from the flags list in the command
table. Improving that would probably clean things up a bit, but for
now if you want a boolean flag and care if it was explicitly false or
default false (or true, but nobody uses that functionality because
before now it was nonsense) you need to use None as your default
rather than True or False.
This doesn't (yet) update help output, because I'm not quite sure how
to do that cleanly.