Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-hgweb-raw.t @ 26228:0fd20a71abdb
extdiff: add a --patch argument for diffing changeset deltas
One of the things I missed the most when transitioning from versioned MQ to
evolve was the loss of being able to check that rebase conflicts were properly
resolved by:
$ hg ci --mq -m "before"
$ hg rebase -s qbase -d tip
$ hg bcompare --mq
The old csets stay in the tree with evolve, but a straight diff includes all of
the other changes that were pulled in, obscuring the code that was rebased.
Diffing deltas can be confusing, but unless radical changes were made during the
resolve, it is very clear when individual hunks are added, dropped or modified.
Unlike the MQ technique, this can only compare a single pair of csets/patches at
a time. Like the MQ method, this also highlights changes in the commit comment
and other metadata.
I originally tried monkey patching from the evolve extension, but that is too
complicated given that it depends on the order the two different extensions are
loaded. This functionality is also useful when comparing grafts however, so
implementing it in the core is more than just convenience.
The --change argument doesn't make much sense for this, but it isn't harmful so
I didn't bother blocking it. The -I/-X options are ignored because of a
limitation of cmdutil.export(). We'll fix that next.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 09 Sep 2015 21:07:38 -0400 |
parents | 4d2b9b304ad0 |
children | 636cf3f7620d |
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#require serve Test raw style of hgweb $ hg init test $ cd test $ mkdir sub $ cat >'sub/some text%.txt' <<ENDSOME > This is just some random text > that will go inside the file and take a few lines. > It is very boring to read, but computers don't > care about things like that. > ENDSOME $ hg add 'sub/some text%.txt' $ hg commit -d "1 0" -m "Just some text" $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -A access.log -E error.log -d --pid-file=hg.pid $ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS $ (get-with-headers.py localhost:$HGPORT '?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw' content-type content-length content-disposition) >getoutput.txt $ killdaemons.py hg.pid $ cat getoutput.txt 200 Script output follows content-type: application/binary content-length: 157 content-disposition: inline; filename="some text%.txt" This is just some random text that will go inside the file and take a few lines. It is very boring to read, but computers don't care about things like that. $ cat access.log error.log 127.0.0.1 - - [*] "GET /?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw HTTP/1.1" 200 - (glob) $ rm access.log error.log $ hg serve -p $HGPORT -A access.log -E error.log -d --pid-file=hg.pid \ > --config web.guessmime=True $ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS $ (get-with-headers.py localhost:$HGPORT '?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw' content-type content-length content-disposition) >getoutput.txt $ killdaemons.py hg.pid $ cat getoutput.txt 200 Script output follows content-type: text/plain; charset="ascii" content-length: 157 content-disposition: inline; filename="some text%.txt" This is just some random text that will go inside the file and take a few lines. It is very boring to read, but computers don't care about things like that. $ cat access.log error.log 127.0.0.1 - - [*] "GET /?f=bf0ff59095c9;file=sub/some%20text%25.txt;style=raw HTTP/1.1" 200 - (glob) $ cd ..