diff hgdemandimport/demandimportpy3.py @ 35665:1ad1e59b405e

lfs: control tracked file selection via a tracked file Since the lfs tracking policy can dramatically affect the repository, it makes more sense to have the policy file checked in, than to rely on all developers configuring their .hgrc properly. The inspiration for this is the .hgeol file. The configuration lives under '[track]', so that other things can be added in the future. Eventually, the config option should be limited to `convert` only. If the file can't be parsed for any reason (including unrecognized elements of the minifileset language), the commit will abort until the problem is corrected. This seems more useful than the warning that hgeol emits, and has no effect on reading the data, so there's no compatibility concerns. My initial thought was to read the file and change each "key = value" line into "((key) & (value))", so that each line could be ORed together, and make a single pass at compiling. Unfortunately, that prevents exclusions if there's a catchall rule. Consider what happens to a large *.c file here: [track] **.c = none() ** = size('>1MB') # ((**.c) & (none())) | ((**) & (size('>1MB'))) => anything > 1MB I also thought about having separate [include] and [exclude] sections. But that just seems to open things up to user mistakes. Consider: [include] **.zip = all() **.php = size('>10MB') [exclude] **.zip = all() # Who wins? **.php = none() # Effectively 'all()' (i.e. nothing excluded), or >10MB ? Therefore, it just compiles each key and value separately, and walks until the key matches something. I'm not sure how to enforce just file patterns on LHS without leaking knowledge about the minifileset here. That means this will allow odd looking lines like this: [track] **.c | **.txt = none() But that's also fewer lines to compile, so slightly more efficient? Some things like 'none()' won't work as expected on LHS though, because that won't match, so that line is skipped. For now, these quirks are not mentioned in the documentation. Jun previously expressed concern about efficiency when scaling to large repos, so I tried avoiding 'repo[None]'. (localrepo.commit() gets repo[None] already, but doesn't tie it to the workingcommitctx used here.) Therefore, I looked at the passed context for 'AMR' status. But that doesn't help with the normal case where the policy file is tracked, but clean. That requires looking up p1() to read the file. I don't see any way to get the content of one file without first creating the full parent context.
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sun, 14 Jan 2018 18:12:51 -0500
parents fcb1ecf2bef7
children 670eb4fa1b86
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