util: make sortdict.keys() return a copy
dict.keys() is documented to return a copy, so it's surprising that
sortdict.keys() did not. I noticed this because we have an extension
that calls readlocaltags(). That method tries to remove any tags that
point to non-existent revisions (most likely stripped). However, since
it's unintentionally working on the instance it's modifying, it
sometimes fails to remove tags when there are multiple bad tags in a
row. This was not caught because localrepo.tags() does an additional
layer of filtering.
sortdict is also used in other places, but I have not checked whether
its keys() and/or __delitem__() methods are used there.
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ echo 0 > a
$ echo 0 > b
$ echo 0 > t.h
$ mkdir t
$ echo 0 > t/x
$ echo 0 > t/b
$ echo 0 > t/e.h
$ mkdir dir.h
$ echo 0 > dir.h/foo
$ hg ci -A -m m
adding a
adding b
adding dir.h/foo
adding t.h
adding t/b
adding t/e.h
adding t/x
$ touch nottracked
$ hg locate a
a
$ hg locate NONEXISTENT
[1]
$ hg locate
a
b
dir.h/foo
t.h
t/b
t/e.h
t/x
$ hg rm a
$ hg ci -m m
$ hg locate a
[1]
$ hg locate NONEXISTENT
[1]
$ hg locate relpath:NONEXISTENT
[1]
$ hg locate
b
dir.h/foo
t.h
t/b
t/e.h
t/x
$ hg locate -r 0 a
a
$ hg locate -r 0 NONEXISTENT
[1]
$ hg locate -r 0 relpath:NONEXISTENT
[1]
$ hg locate -r 0
a
b
dir.h/foo
t.h
t/b
t/e.h
t/x
-I/-X with relative path should work:
$ cd t
$ hg locate
b
dir.h/foo
t.h
t/b
t/e.h
t/x
$ hg locate -I ../t
t/b
t/e.h
t/x
Issue294: hg remove --after dir fails when dir.* also exists
$ cd ..
$ rm -r t
$ hg rm t/b
$ hg locate 't/**'
t/b (glob)
t/e.h (glob)
t/x (glob)
$ hg files
b
dir.h/foo (glob)
t.h
t/e.h (glob)
t/x (glob)
$ hg files b
b
$ mkdir otherdir
$ cd otherdir
$ hg files path:
../b (glob)
../dir.h/foo (glob)
../t.h (glob)
../t/e.h (glob)
../t/x (glob)
$ hg files path:.
../b (glob)
../dir.h/foo (glob)
../t.h (glob)
../t/e.h (glob)
../t/x (glob)
$ hg locate b
../b (glob)
../t/b (glob)
$ hg locate '*.h'
../t.h (glob)
../t/e.h (glob)
$ hg locate path:t/x
../t/x (glob)
$ hg locate 're:.*\.h$'
../t.h (glob)
../t/e.h (glob)
$ hg locate -r 0 b
../b (glob)
../t/b (glob)
$ hg locate -r 0 '*.h'
../t.h (glob)
../t/e.h (glob)
$ hg locate -r 0 path:t/x
../t/x (glob)
$ hg locate -r 0 're:.*\.h$'
../t.h (glob)
../t/e.h (glob)
$ hg files
../b (glob)
../dir.h/foo (glob)
../t.h (glob)
../t/e.h (glob)
../t/x (glob)
$ hg files .
[1]
$ cd ../..