comparison hgext/largefiles/reposetup.py @ 23923:ab6fd3205dad stable

largefiles: fix commit of a directory with no largefile changes (issue4330) When a directory is named in the commit file list, the previous behavior was to walk the list, and if no normal files in the directory were also named, add the corresponding standin for each largefile in that directory. The directory is then dropped from the list, so that committing a directory with no normal file changes works. It then added the corresponding standin directory for the first largefile seen, by prefixing it with '.hglf/'. The latter is unnecessary since each affected largefile is explicitly referenced by its standin in the list. It also caused an abort if there were no changed largefiles in the directory, because none of its standins changed: abort: .hglf/foo/bar: no match under directory! This list of files is used to tweak a matcher in lfutil.updatestandinsbymatch(), which is what is passed to commit(). The status() call that is ultimately done in the commit code with this matcher seems to have some OS specific differences. It is not necessary to append '.' for Windows to run the largefiles tests cleanly. But if '.' is not added to the list, the match function isn't called on Linux, so status() would miss any normal files that were also in a named directory. The commit then proceeds without those normal files, or says "nothing changed" if there were no changed largefiles in the directory. This is not filesystem specific, as VFAT on Linux had the same behavior as when run on ext4. It is also not an issue with lfilesrepo.status(), since that only calls the overridden implementation when paths are passed to commit. I dont have access to an OS X machine ATM to test there. Maybe there's a better way to do this. But since the standin directory for the first largefile was previously being added, and that caused the same walk in status(), there's no preformance change to this. There is no danger of erroneously committing files in '.', because the original match function is called, and if it fails, the lfutil.updatestandinsbymatch() tweaked matcher only indicates a match if the file is in the list of standins- and '.' never is. The added tests confirm this.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sun, 18 Jan 2015 15:15:40 -0500
parents 1ec6dbb9b216
children df463ca0adef
comparison
equal deleted inserted replaced
23922:5831bef5387f 23923:ab6fd3205dad
324 # any matching largefiles 324 # any matching largefiles
325 for lf in lfiles: 325 for lf in lfiles:
326 if self.dirstate.normalize(lf).startswith(d): 326 if self.dirstate.normalize(lf).startswith(d):
327 actualfiles.append(lf) 327 actualfiles.append(lf)
328 if not matcheddir: 328 if not matcheddir:
329 actualfiles.append(lfutil.standin(f)) 329 # There may still be normal files in the dir, so
330 # make sure a directory is in the list, which
331 # forces status to walk and call the match
332 # function on the matcher. Windows does NOT
333 # require this.
334 actualfiles.append('.')
330 matcheddir = True 335 matcheddir = True
331 # Nothing in dir, so readd it 336 # Nothing in dir, so readd it
332 # and let commit reject it 337 # and let commit reject it
333 if not matcheddir: 338 if not matcheddir:
334 actualfiles.append(f) 339 actualfiles.append(f)