Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-convert-cvs-detectmerge.t @ 44985:1ca0047fd7e1
absorb: preserve changesets which were already empty
Most commands in Mercurial (commit, rebase, absorb itself) don’t create empty
changesets or drop them if they become empty. If there’s a changeset that’s
empty, it must be a deliberate choice of the user. At least it shouldn’t be
absorb’s responsibility to prune them. The fact that changesets that became
empty during absorb are pruned, is unaffected by this.
This case was found while writing patches which make it possible to configure
absorb and rebase to not drop empty changesets. Even without having such config
set, I think it’s valuable to preserve changesets which were already empty.
author | Manuel Jacob <me@manueljacob.de> |
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date | Mon, 01 Jun 2020 20:57:14 +0200 |
parents | e5e5ee2b60e4 |
children |
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#require cvs no-root Test config convert.cvsps.mergefrom config setting. (Should test similar mergeto feature, but I don't understand it yet.) Requires builtin cvsps. $ CVSROOT=`pwd`/cvsrepo $ export CVSROOT $ cvscall() > { > cvs -f "$@" > } output of 'cvs ci' varies unpredictably, so just discard it XXX copied from test-convert-cvs-synthetic $ cvsci() > { > sleep 1 > cvs -f ci "$@" > /dev/null > } XXX copied from test-convert-cvs-synthetic $ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH > [extensions] > convert = > [convert] > cvsps.cache = 0 > cvsps.mergefrom = \[MERGE from (\S+)\] > EOF create cvs repository with one project $ cvscall -q -d "$CVSROOT" init $ mkdir cvsrepo/proj populate cvs repository $ cvscall -Q co proj $ cd proj $ touch file1 $ cvscall -Q add file1 $ cvsci -m"add file1 on trunk" cvs commit: Examining . create two release branches $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_0 T file1 $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_1 T file1 modify file1 on branch v1_0 $ cvscall -Q update -rv1_0 $ sleep 1 $ echo "change" >> file1 $ cvsci -m"add text" cvs commit: Examining . make unrelated change on v1_1 $ cvscall -Q update -rv1_1 $ touch unrelated $ cvscall -Q add unrelated $ cvsci -m"unrelated change" cvs commit: Examining . merge file1 to v1_1 $ cvscall -Q update -jv1_0 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v retrieving revision 1.1 retrieving revision 1.1.2.1 Merging differences between 1.1 and 1.1.2.1 into file1 $ cvsci -m"add text [MERGE from v1_0]" cvs commit: Examining . merge change to trunk $ cvscall -Q update -A $ cvscall -Q update -jv1_1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v retrieving revision 1.1 retrieving revision 1.1.4.1 Merging differences between 1.1 and 1.1.4.1 into file1 $ cvsci -m"add text [MERGE from v1_1]" cvs commit: Examining . non-merged change on trunk $ echo "foo" > file2 $ cvscall -Q add file2 $ cvsci -m"add file2 on trunk" file2 this will create rev 1.3 change on trunk to backport $ echo "backport me" >> file1 $ cvsci -m"add other text" file1 $ cvscall log file1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v Working file: file1 head: 1.3 branch: locks: strict access list: symbolic names: v1_1: 1.1.0.4 v1_0: 1.1.0.2 keyword substitution: kv total revisions: 5; selected revisions: 5 description: ---------------------------- revision 1.3 date: * (glob) add other text ---------------------------- revision 1.2 date: * (glob) add text [MERGE from v1_1] ---------------------------- revision 1.1 date: * (glob) branches: 1.1.2; 1.1.4; add file1 on trunk ---------------------------- revision 1.1.4.1 date: * (glob) add text [MERGE from v1_0] ---------------------------- revision 1.1.2.1 date: * (glob) add text ============================================================================= XXX how many ways are there to spell "trunk" with CVS? backport trunk change to v1_1 $ cvscall -Q update -rv1_1 $ cvscall -Q update -j1.2 -j1.3 file1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v retrieving revision 1.2 retrieving revision 1.3 Merging differences between 1.2 and 1.3 into file1 $ cvsci -m"add other text [MERGE from HEAD]" file1 fix bug on v1_1, merge to trunk with error $ cvscall -Q update -rv1_1 $ echo "merge forward" >> file1 $ cvscall -Q tag unmerged $ cvsci -m"fix file1" cvs commit: Examining . $ cvscall -Q update -A $ cvscall -Q update -junmerged -jv1_1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v retrieving revision 1.1.4.2 retrieving revision 1.1.4.3 Merging differences between 1.1.4.2 and 1.1.4.3 into file1 note the typo in the commit log message $ cvsci -m"fix file1 [MERGE from v1-1]" cvs commit: Examining . $ cvs -Q tag -d unmerged convert to hg $ cd .. $ hg convert proj proj.hg initializing destination proj.hg repository connecting to $TESTTMP/cvsrepo scanning source... collecting CVS rlog 12 log entries creating changesets warning: CVS commit message references non-existent branch 'v1-1': fix file1 [MERGE from v1-1] 10 changeset entries sorting... converting... 9 add file1 on trunk 8 unrelated change 7 add text 6 add text [MERGE from v1_0] 5 add text [MERGE from v1_1] 4 add file2 on trunk 3 add other text 2 add other text [MERGE from HEAD] 1 fix file1 0 fix file1 [MERGE from v1-1] complete log $ template="{rev}: '{branches}' {desc}\n" $ hg -R proj.hg log --template="$template" 9: '' fix file1 [MERGE from v1-1] 8: 'v1_1' fix file1 7: 'v1_1' add other text [MERGE from HEAD] 6: '' add other text 5: '' add file2 on trunk 4: '' add text [MERGE from v1_1] 3: 'v1_1' add text [MERGE from v1_0] 2: 'v1_0' add text 1: 'v1_1' unrelated change 0: '' add file1 on trunk graphical log $ hg -R proj.hg log -G --template="$template" o 9: '' fix file1 [MERGE from v1-1] | | o 8: 'v1_1' fix file1 | | | o 7: 'v1_1' add other text [MERGE from HEAD] |/| o | 6: '' add other text | | o | 5: '' add file2 on trunk | | o | 4: '' add text [MERGE from v1_1] |\| | o 3: 'v1_1' add text [MERGE from v1_0] | |\ +---o 2: 'v1_0' add text | | | o 1: 'v1_1' unrelated change |/ o 0: '' add file1 on trunk