view mercurial/encoding.py @ 12536:208fc9ad6a48

alias: only allow global options before a shell alias, pass later ones through This patch refactors the dispatch code to change how arguments to shell aliases are handled. A separate "pass" to determine whether a command is a shell alias has been added. The rough steps dispatch now performs when a command is given are these: * Parse all arguments up to the command name. * If any arguments such as --repository or --cwd are given (which could change the config file used, and therefore the definition of aliases), they are taken into account. * We determine whether the command is a shell alias. * If so, execute the alias. The --repo and --cwd arguments are still in effect. Any arguments *after* the command name are passed unchanged through to the shell command (and interpolated as normal. * If the command is *not* a shell alias, the dispatching is effectively "reset" and reparsed as normal in its entirety. The net effect of this patch is to make shell alias commands behave as you would expect. Any arguments you give to a shell alias *after* the alias name are passed through unchanged. This lets you do something like the following: [alias] filereleased = !$HG log -r 'descendants(adds("$1")) and tagged()' -l1 $2 $3 $4 $5 $ hg filereleased hgext/bookmarks.py --style compact Previously the `--style compact` part would fail because Mercurial would interpret those arguments as arguments to the alias command itself (which doesn't take any arguments). Also: running something like `hg -R ~/src/hg-crew filereleased hgext/bookmarks.py` when `filereleased` is only defined in that repo's config will now work. These global arguments can *only* be given to a shell alias *before* the alias name. For example, this will *not* work in the above situation: $ hg filereleased -R ~/src/hg-crew hgext/bookmarks.py The reason for this is that you may want to pass arguments like --repository to the alias (or, more likely, their short versions like -R): [alias] own = !chown $@ `$HG root` $ hg own steve $ hg own -R steve
author Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com>
date Tue, 24 Aug 2010 18:25:33 -0400
parents c327bfa5e831
children 614f0d8724ab
line wrap: on
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# encoding.py - character transcoding support for Mercurial
#
#  Copyright 2005-2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

import error
import unicodedata, locale, os

def _getpreferredencoding():
    '''
    On darwin, getpreferredencoding ignores the locale environment and
    always returns mac-roman. http://bugs.python.org/issue6202 fixes this
    for Python 2.7 and up. This is the same corrected code for earlier
    Python versions.

    However, we can't use a version check for this method, as some distributions 
    patch Python to fix this. Instead, we use it as a 'fixer' for the mac-roman
    encoding, as it is unlikely that this encoding is the actually expected.
    '''
    try:
        locale.CODESET
    except AttributeError:
        # Fall back to parsing environment variables :-(
        return locale.getdefaultlocale()[1]

    oldloc = locale.setlocale(locale.LC_CTYPE)
    locale.setlocale(locale.LC_CTYPE, "")
    result = locale.nl_langinfo(locale.CODESET)
    locale.setlocale(locale.LC_CTYPE, oldloc)

    return result

_encodingfixers = {
    '646': lambda: 'ascii',
    'ANSI_X3.4-1968': lambda: 'ascii',
    'mac-roman': _getpreferredencoding
}

try:
    encoding = os.environ.get("HGENCODING")
    if not encoding:
        encoding = locale.getpreferredencoding() or 'ascii'
        encoding = _encodingfixers.get(encoding, lambda: encoding)()
except locale.Error:
    encoding = 'ascii'
encodingmode = os.environ.get("HGENCODINGMODE", "strict")
fallbackencoding = 'ISO-8859-1'

def tolocal(s):
    """
    Convert a string from internal UTF-8 to local encoding

    All internal strings should be UTF-8 but some repos before the
    implementation of locale support may contain latin1 or possibly
    other character sets. We attempt to decode everything strictly
    using UTF-8, then Latin-1, and failing that, we use UTF-8 and
    replace unknown characters.
    """
    for e in ('UTF-8', fallbackencoding):
        try:
            u = s.decode(e) # attempt strict decoding
            return u.encode(encoding, "replace")
        except LookupError, k:
            raise error.Abort("%s, please check your locale settings" % k)
        except UnicodeDecodeError:
            pass
    u = s.decode("utf-8", "replace") # last ditch
    return u.encode(encoding, "replace")

def fromlocal(s):
    """
    Convert a string from the local character encoding to UTF-8

    We attempt to decode strings using the encoding mode set by
    HGENCODINGMODE, which defaults to 'strict'. In this mode, unknown
    characters will cause an error message. Other modes include
    'replace', which replaces unknown characters with a special
    Unicode character, and 'ignore', which drops the character.
    """
    try:
        return s.decode(encoding, encodingmode).encode("utf-8")
    except UnicodeDecodeError, inst:
        sub = s[max(0, inst.start - 10):inst.start + 10]
        raise error.Abort("decoding near '%s': %s!" % (sub, inst))
    except LookupError, k:
        raise error.Abort("%s, please check your locale settings" % k)

def colwidth(s):
    "Find the column width of a UTF-8 string for display"
    d = s.decode(encoding, 'replace')
    if hasattr(unicodedata, 'east_asian_width'):
        w = unicodedata.east_asian_width
        return sum([w(c) in 'WFA' and 2 or 1 for c in d])
    return len(d)