transaction: quietly rollback if no other changes than temporary files
If no actual change have been made, we don't really need to roll them back. We
only have to cleanup some temporary files and it seems reasonable to do that
quietly.
This will help us to use the transaction in wider context¹ without impacting the
user experience.
[1] as in Python context managers that lives longer.
Corrupt an hg repo with two pulls.
create one repo with a long history
$ hg init source1
$ cd source1
$ touch foo
$ hg add foo
$ for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10; do
> echo $i >> foo
> hg ci -m $i
> done
$ cd ..
create one repo with a shorter history
$ hg clone -r 0 source1 source2
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files
new changesets 495a0ec48aaf
updating to branch default
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ cd source2
$ echo a >> foo
$ hg ci -m a
$ cd ..
create a third repo to pull both other repos into it
$ hg init corrupted
$ cd corrupted
use a hook to make the second pull start while the first one is still running
$ echo '[hooks]' >> .hg/hgrc
$ echo 'prechangegroup = sleep 5' >> .hg/hgrc
start a pull...
$ hg pull ../source1 > pull.out 2>&1 &
... and start another pull before the first one has finished
$ sleep 1
$ hg pull ../source2 2>/dev/null
pulling from ../source2
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files (+1 heads)
new changesets ca3c05af513e
(run 'hg heads' to see heads, 'hg merge' to merge)
$ cat pull.out
pulling from ../source1
requesting all changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 10 changesets with 10 changes to 1 files
new changesets 495a0ec48aaf:1e7b6c812ca8
(run 'hg update' to get a working copy)
see the result
$ wait
$ hg verify -q
$ cd ..