Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/policy.py @ 37210:2a2ce93e12f4
templatefuncs: add mailmap template function
This commit adds a template function to support the .mailmap file
in Mercurial repositories. The .mailmap file comes from git, and
can be used to map new emails and names for old commits. The general
use case is that someone may change their name or author commits
under different emails and aliases, which would make these
commits appear as though they came from different persons. The
file allows you to specify the correct name that should be used
in place of the author field specified in the commit.
The mailmap file has 4 possible formats used to map old "commit"
names to new "proper" names:
1. <proper@email.com> <commit@email.com>
2. Proper Name <commit@email.com>
3. Proper Name <proper@email.com> <commit@email.com>
4. Proper Name <proper@email.com> Commit Name <commit@email.com>
Essentially there is a commit email present in each mailmap entry,
that maps to either an updated name, email, or both. The final
possible format allows commits authored by a person who used
both an old name and an old email to map to a new name and email.
To parse the file, we split by spaces and build a name out
of every element that does not start with "<". Once we find an element
that does start with "<" we concatenate all the name elements that preceded
and add that as a parsed name. We then add the email as the first
parsed email. We repeat the process until the end of the line, or
a comment is found. We will be left with all parsed names in a list,
and all parsed emails in a list, with the 0 index being the proper
values and the 1 index being the commit values (if they were specified
in the entry).
The commit values are added as the keys to a dict, and with the proper
fields as the values. The mapname function takes the mapping object and
the commit author field and attempts to look for a corresponding entry.
To do so we try (commit name, commit email) first, and if no results are
returned then (None, commit email) is also looked up. This is due to
format 4 from above, where someone may have a mailmap entry with both
name and email, and if they don't it is possible they have an entry that
uses only the commit email.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D2904
author | Connor Sheehan <sheehan@mozilla.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 19 Mar 2018 11:16:21 -0400 |
parents | f3c314020beb |
children | 2025bf60adb2 |
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# policy.py - module policy logic for Mercurial. # # Copyright 2015 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. from __future__ import absolute_import import os import sys # Rules for how modules can be loaded. Values are: # # c - require C extensions # allow - allow pure Python implementation when C loading fails # cffi - required cffi versions (implemented within pure module) # cffi-allow - allow pure Python implementation if cffi version is missing # py - only load pure Python modules # # By default, fall back to the pure modules so the in-place build can # run without recompiling the C extensions. This will be overridden by # __modulepolicy__ generated by setup.py. policy = b'allow' _packageprefs = { # policy: (versioned package, pure package) b'c': (r'cext', None), b'allow': (r'cext', r'pure'), b'cffi': (r'cffi', None), b'cffi-allow': (r'cffi', r'pure'), b'py': (None, r'pure'), } try: from . import __modulepolicy__ policy = __modulepolicy__.modulepolicy except ImportError: pass # PyPy doesn't load C extensions. # # The canonical way to do this is to test platform.python_implementation(). # But we don't import platform and don't bloat for it here. if r'__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names: policy = b'cffi' # Environment variable can always force settings. if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: if r'HGMODULEPOLICY' in os.environ: policy = os.environ[r'HGMODULEPOLICY'].encode(r'utf-8') else: policy = os.environ.get(r'HGMODULEPOLICY', policy) def _importfrom(pkgname, modname): # from .<pkgname> import <modname> (where . is looked through this module) fakelocals = {} pkg = __import__(pkgname, globals(), fakelocals, [modname], level=1) try: fakelocals[modname] = mod = getattr(pkg, modname) except AttributeError: raise ImportError(r'cannot import name %s' % modname) # force import; fakelocals[modname] may be replaced with the real module getattr(mod, r'__doc__', None) return fakelocals[modname] # keep in sync with "version" in C modules _cextversions = { (r'cext', r'base85'): 1, (r'cext', r'bdiff'): 3, (r'cext', r'diffhelpers'): 1, (r'cext', r'mpatch'): 1, (r'cext', r'osutil'): 4, (r'cext', r'parsers'): 4, } # map import request to other package or module _modredirects = { (r'cext', r'charencode'): (r'cext', r'parsers'), (r'cffi', r'base85'): (r'pure', r'base85'), (r'cffi', r'charencode'): (r'pure', r'charencode'), (r'cffi', r'diffhelpers'): (r'pure', r'diffhelpers'), (r'cffi', r'parsers'): (r'pure', r'parsers'), } def _checkmod(pkgname, modname, mod): expected = _cextversions.get((pkgname, modname)) actual = getattr(mod, r'version', None) if actual != expected: raise ImportError(r'cannot import module %s.%s ' r'(expected version: %d, actual: %r)' % (pkgname, modname, expected, actual)) def importmod(modname): """Import module according to policy and check API version""" try: verpkg, purepkg = _packageprefs[policy] except KeyError: raise ImportError(r'invalid HGMODULEPOLICY %r' % policy) assert verpkg or purepkg if verpkg: pn, mn = _modredirects.get((verpkg, modname), (verpkg, modname)) try: mod = _importfrom(pn, mn) if pn == verpkg: _checkmod(pn, mn, mod) return mod except ImportError: if not purepkg: raise pn, mn = _modredirects.get((purepkg, modname), (purepkg, modname)) return _importfrom(pn, mn)