Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-mailmap.t @ 50195:11e6eee4b063
transaction: use the standard transaction mechanism to backup branch
Branch is a bit special :
- It currently does not collaborate with the transaction (or any scoping) for
writing (this is bad)
- It can change without the lock being taken (it is protected by `wlock`)
So we rely on the same mechanism as for the backup of the other dirstate file:
- we only do a backup if we hold the wlock
- we force a backup though the transaction
Since "branch" write does not collaborate with the transaction, we cannot back
it up "at the last minute" as we do for the dirstate. We have to back it up
"upfront". Since we have a backup, the transaction is no longer doing its
"quick_abort" and get noisy. Which is quite annoying. To work around this, and
to avoid jumping in yet-another-rabbit-hole of "getting branch written
properly", I am doing horrible things to the transaction in the meantime.
We should be able to get this code go away during the next cycle.
In the meantime, I prefer to take this small stop so that we stop abusing the
"journal" and "undo" mechanism instead of the proper backup mechanism of the
transaction.
Also note that this change regress the warning message for the legacy fallback
introduced in 2008 when issue902 got fixed in dd5a501cb97f (Mercurial 1.0).
I feel like this is fine as issue 902 remains fixed, and this would only affect
people deploying a mix of 15 year old Mercurial and modern mercurial, and using
branch and rollback extensively.
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> |
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date | Thu, 23 Feb 2023 15:37:46 +0100 |
parents | 8e57c3b0dce4 |
children |
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Create a repo and add some commits $ hg init mm $ cd mm $ echo "Test content" > testfile1 $ hg add testfile1 $ hg commit -m "First commit" -u "Proper <commit@m.c>" $ echo "Test content 2" > testfile2 $ hg add testfile2 $ hg commit -m "Second commit" -u "Commit Name 2 <commit2@m.c>" $ echo "Test content 3" > testfile3 $ hg add testfile3 $ hg commit -m "Third commit" -u "Commit Name 3 <commit3@m.c>" $ echo "Test content 4" > testfile4 $ hg add testfile4 $ hg commit -m "Fourth commit" -u "Commit Name 4 <commit4@m.c>" Add a .mailmap file with each possible entry type plus comments $ cat > .mailmap << EOF > # Comment shouldn't break anything > <proper@m.c> <commit@m.c> # Should update email only > Proper Name 2 <commit2@m.c> # Should update name only > Proper Name 3 <proper@m.c> <commit3@m.c> # Should update name, email due to email > Proper Name 4 <proper@m.c> Commit Name 4 <commit4@m.c> # Should update name, email due to name, email > EOF $ hg add .mailmap $ hg commit -m "Add mailmap file" -u "Testuser <test123@m.c>" Output of commits should be normal without filter $ hg log -T "{author}\n" -r "all()" Proper <commit@m.c> Commit Name 2 <commit2@m.c> Commit Name 3 <commit3@m.c> Commit Name 4 <commit4@m.c> Testuser <test123@m.c> Output of commits with filter shows their mailmap values $ hg log -T "{mailmap(author)}\n" -r "all()" Proper <proper@m.c> Proper Name 2 <commit2@m.c> Proper Name 3 <proper@m.c> Proper Name 4 <proper@m.c> Testuser <test123@m.c> Add new mailmap entry for testuser $ cat >> .mailmap << EOF > <newmmentry@m.c> <test123@m.c> > EOF Output of commits with filter shows their updated mailmap values $ hg log -T "{mailmap(author)}\n" -r "all()" Proper <proper@m.c> Proper Name 2 <commit2@m.c> Proper Name 3 <proper@m.c> Proper Name 4 <proper@m.c> Testuser <newmmentry@m.c> A commit with improperly formatted user field should not break the filter $ echo "some more test content" > testfile1 $ hg commit -m "Commit with improper user field" -u "Improper user" $ hg log -T "{mailmap(author)}\n" -r "all()" Proper <proper@m.c> Proper Name 2 <commit2@m.c> Proper Name 3 <proper@m.c> Proper Name 4 <proper@m.c> Testuser <newmmentry@m.c> Improper user No TypeError beacause of invalid input $ hg log -T '{mailmap(termwidth)}\n' -r0 80