view mercurial/node.py @ 35778:128dd940bedc

repair: invalidate volatile sets after stripping Matt Harbison reported that some tests were broken on Windows after 1a09dad8b85a (evolution: report new unstable changesets, 2018-01-14). The failures were exactly as seen in this patch. The failures actually seemed correct, which made me wonder why they didn't fail the same way on Linux. It turned out to be a cache invalidation problem. The new orphan mentioned in the test case actually does get created when we're re-applying the temporary bundle that's created while stripping. However, without the invalidation, it appears that there was already an orphan before applying the temporary bundle. The warnings about unknown working parent appear because the aformentioned changeset means that we're now accessing the dirstate while it's invalid. We may want to suppress these messages that happen in the intermediate strip state, but they're technically correct (although confusing to the user), so I think just fixing the cache invalidation is fine for now. I haven't figured out why the caches seemed to get correctly invalidated on Windows. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1933
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Sat, 20 Jan 2018 23:21:59 -0800
parents af854b1b36f8
children f574cc00831a
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# node.py - basic nodeid manipulation for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

from __future__ import absolute_import

import binascii

# This ugly style has a noticeable effect in manifest parsing
hex = binascii.hexlify
bin = binascii.unhexlify

nullrev = -1
nullid = b"\0" * 20
nullhex = hex(nullid)

# Phony node value to stand-in for new files in some uses of
# manifests.
newnodeid = '!' * 20
addednodeid = ('0' * 15) + 'added'
modifiednodeid = ('0' * 12) + 'modified'

wdirnodes = {newnodeid, addednodeid, modifiednodeid}

# pseudo identifiers for working directory
# (they are experimental, so don't add too many dependencies on them)
wdirrev = 0x7fffffff
wdirid = b"\xff" * 20
wdirhex = hex(wdirid)

def short(node):
    return hex(node[:6])