mercurial/scmwindows.py
author Angel Ezquerra <angel.ezquerra@gmail.com>
Tue, 13 Aug 2013 01:38:30 +0200
changeset 19638 20096384754f
parent 18712 e3ddb4068757
child 22583 23c995ed466b
permissions -rw-r--r--
mq: update subrepos when applying / unapplying patches that change .hgsubstate Up until now applying or unapplying a patch that modified .hgsubstate would not work as expected because it would not update the subrepos according to the .hgsubstate change. This made it very easy to lose subrepo changes when using mq. This revision also changes the test-mq-subrepo test so that on the qpop / qpush tests. We no longer use the debugsub command to check the state of the subrepos after the qpop and qpush operations. Instead we directly run the id command on the subrepos that we want to check. The reason is that using the debugsub command is misleading because it does not really check the state of the subrepos on the working directory (it just returns what the change that is specified on a given revision). Because of this the tests did not detect the problem that this revision fixes (i.e. that applying a patch did not update the subrepos to the corresponding revisions). # HG changeset patch # User Angel Ezquerra <angel.ezquerra@gmail.com> # Date 1376350710 -7200 # Tue Aug 13 01:38:30 2013 +0200 # Node ID 60897e264858cdcd46f89e27a702086f08adca02 # Parent 2defb5453f223c3027eb2f7788fbddd52bbb3352 mq: update subrepos when applying / unapplying patches that change .hgsubstate Up until now applying or unapplying a patch that modified .hgsubstate would not work as expected because it would not update the subrepos according to the .hgsubstate change. This made it very easy to lose subrepo changes when using mq. This revision also changes the test-mq-subrepo test so that on the qpop / qpush tests. We no longer use the debugsub command to check the state of the subrepos after the qpop and qpush operations. Instead we directly run the id command on the subrepos that we want to check. The reason is that using the debugsub command is misleading because it does not really check the state of the subrepos on the working directory (it just returns what the change that is specified on a given revision). Because of this the tests did not detect the problem that this revision fixes (i.e. that applying a patch did not update the subrepos to the corresponding revisions).

import os
import osutil
import util
import _winreg

def systemrcpath():
    '''return default os-specific hgrc search path'''
    rcpath = []
    filename = util.executablepath()
    # Use mercurial.ini found in directory with hg.exe
    progrc = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(filename), 'mercurial.ini')
    if os.path.isfile(progrc):
        rcpath.append(progrc)
        return rcpath
    # Use hgrc.d found in directory with hg.exe
    progrcd = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(filename), 'hgrc.d')
    if os.path.isdir(progrcd):
        for f, kind in osutil.listdir(progrcd):
            if f.endswith('.rc'):
                rcpath.append(os.path.join(progrcd, f))
        return rcpath
    # else look for a system rcpath in the registry
    value = util.lookupreg('SOFTWARE\\Mercurial', None,
                           _winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE)
    if not isinstance(value, str) or not value:
        return rcpath
    value = util.localpath(value)
    for p in value.split(os.pathsep):
        if p.lower().endswith('mercurial.ini'):
            rcpath.append(p)
        elif os.path.isdir(p):
            for f, kind in osutil.listdir(p):
                if f.endswith('.rc'):
                    rcpath.append(os.path.join(p, f))
    return rcpath

def userrcpath():
    '''return os-specific hgrc search path to the user dir'''
    home = os.path.expanduser('~')
    path = [os.path.join(home, 'mercurial.ini'),
            os.path.join(home, '.hgrc')]
    userprofile = os.environ.get('USERPROFILE')
    if userprofile:
        path.append(os.path.join(userprofile, 'mercurial.ini'))
        path.append(os.path.join(userprofile, '.hgrc'))
    return path