Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-convert-cvs-synthetic.t @ 30660:1f21a6835604
convert: add config option to copy extra keys from Git commits
Git commit objects support storing arbitrary key-value metadata. While
there is no user-facing mechanism in Git to record these values, some
tools do record data here.
Currently, `hg convert` only handles the "author," "committer," and
"parent" keys in Git commit objects. All other keys are ignored. This
means that any custom keys are lost when converting Git repos to
Mercurial.
This patch implements support for copying a whitelist of extra keys
from Git commit objects to the "extras" dict of the destination. As
the added tests demonstate, this allows extra metadata to be preserved
during the conversion process.
This patch stops short of converting all metadata to "extras." We could
potentially implement this via `convert.git.extrakeys=*` or similar.
But copying everything by default is a bit dangerous because if Git
adds new keys to commit objects, we could find ourselves copying
things that shouldn't be copied!
This patch also assumes the source key is the same as the destination
key. We could implement support for prefixing the output key to
distinguish it as coming from Git. But until this feature is needed,
I'm inclined to hold off implementing it.
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 22 Dec 2016 23:28:11 -0700 |
parents | 96529f81e2e9 |
children | e5e5ee2b60e4 |
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#require cvs112 This feature requires use of builtin cvsps! $ echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH $ echo "convert = " >> $HGRCPATH create cvs repository with one project $ mkdir cvsrepo $ cd cvsrepo $ CVSROOT=`pwd` $ export CVSROOT $ CVS_OPTIONS=-f $ export CVS_OPTIONS $ cd .. $ rmdir cvsrepo $ cvscall() > { > cvs -f "$@" > } output of 'cvs ci' varies unpredictably, so just discard it $ cvsci() > { > sleep 1 > cvs -f ci "$@" >/dev/null > } $ cvscall -d "$CVSROOT" init $ mkdir cvsrepo/proj $ cvscall -q co proj create file1 on the trunk $ cd proj $ touch file1 $ cvscall -Q add file1 $ cvsci -m"add file1 on trunk" file1 create two branches $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_0 T file1 $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_1 T file1 create file2 on branch v1_0 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_0 $ touch file2 $ cvscall -Q add file2 $ cvsci -m"add file2" file2 create file3, file4 on branch v1_1 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_1 $ touch file3 $ touch file4 $ cvscall -Q add file3 file4 $ cvsci -m"add file3, file4 on branch v1_1" file3 file4 merge file2 from v1_0 to v1_1 $ cvscall -Q up -jv1_0 $ cvsci -m"MERGE from v1_0: add file2" cvs commit: Examining . Step things up a notch: now we make the history really hairy, with changes bouncing back and forth between trunk and v1_2 and merges going both ways. (I.e., try to model the real world.) create branch v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -A $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_2 T file1 create file5 on branch v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_2 $ touch file5 $ cvs -Q add file5 $ cvsci -m"add file5 on v1_2" cvs commit: Examining . create file6 on trunk post-v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -A $ touch file6 $ cvscall -Q add file6 $ cvsci -m"add file6 on trunk post-v1_2" cvs commit: Examining . merge file5 from v1_2 to trunk $ cvscall -Q up -A $ cvscall -Q up -jv1_2 file5 $ cvsci -m"MERGE from v1_2: add file5" cvs commit: Examining . merge file6 from trunk to v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_2 $ cvscall up -jHEAD file6 U file6 $ cvsci -m"MERGE from HEAD: add file6" cvs commit: Examining . cvs rlog output $ cvscall -q rlog proj | egrep '^(RCS file|revision)' RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v revision 1.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file2,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.4.2 revision 1.1.4.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file3,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file4,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file5,v revision 1.2 revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file6,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.2 revision 1.1.2.1 convert to hg (#1) $ cd .. $ hg convert --datesort proj proj.hg initializing destination proj.hg repository connecting to $TESTTMP/cvsrepo scanning source... collecting CVS rlog 15 log entries creating changesets 9 changeset entries sorting... converting... 8 add file1 on trunk 7 add file2 6 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 5 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 3 add file5 on v1_2 2 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 1 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 0 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 hg log -G output (#1) $ hg -R proj.hg log -G --template "{rev} {desc}\n" o 8 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 | | o 7 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 | | o | 6 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 | | | o 5 add file5 on v1_2 | | | | o 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 | | | o | | 3 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. |/ / | o 2 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 |/ | o 1 add file2 |/ o 0 add file1 on trunk convert to hg (#2: with merge detection) $ hg convert \ > --config convert.cvsps.mergefrom='"^MERGE from (\S+):"' \ > --datesort \ > proj proj.hg2 initializing destination proj.hg2 repository connecting to $TESTTMP/cvsrepo scanning source... collecting CVS rlog 15 log entries creating changesets 9 changeset entries sorting... converting... 8 add file1 on trunk 7 add file2 6 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 5 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 3 add file5 on v1_2 2 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 1 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 0 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 hg log -G output (#2) $ hg -R proj.hg2 log -G --template "{rev} {desc}\n" o 8 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 | | o 7 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 | | o | 6 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 | | | o 5 add file5 on v1_2 | | | | o 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 | | | o | | 3 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. |/ / | o 2 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 |/ | o 1 add file2 |/ o 0 add file1 on trunk