view tests/test-mactext.t @ 14927:2aa3e07b2f07

posix, windows: introduce cachestat This class contains a stat result, and possibly other file info to reliably determine between two points in time whether a file has changed. Uniquely identifying a file gives us that reliability because we either atomic rename or append. So one of two will happen: the file 'id' will change, or the size of the file will change. posix implements it simply by calling os.stat() and checking if the result has st_ino. For now on Windows we always assume the path is uncacheable. This can be improved on NTFS due to file IDs: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa363788(v=vs.85).aspx So we need to find out if a file path is on an NTFS drive, for that we have: - GetVolumeInformation, which unfortunately only works with a root path (but is available on XP) - GetVolumeInformationByHandleW, works on a full file path but requires Vista or higher
author Idan Kamara <idankk86@gmail.com>
date Mon, 25 Jul 2011 15:03:02 +0300
parents 9446bd059da3
children 1e9451476bf8
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  $ cat > unix2mac.py <<EOF
  > import sys
  > 
  > for path in sys.argv[1:]:
  >     data = file(path, 'rb').read()
  >     data = data.replace('\n', '\r')
  >     file(path, 'wb').write(data)
  > EOF
  $ cat > print.py <<EOF
  > import sys
  > print(sys.stdin.read().replace('\n', '<LF>').replace('\r', '<CR>').replace('\0', '<NUL>'))
  > EOF
  $ hg init
  $ echo '[hooks]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo 'pretxncommit.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo 'pretxnchangegroup.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ cat .hg/hgrc
  [hooks]
  pretxncommit.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr
  pretxnchangegroup.cr = python:hgext.win32text.forbidcr
  $ echo
  
  $ echo hello > f
  $ hg add f
  $ hg ci -m 1
  $ echo
  
  $ python unix2mac.py f
  $ hg ci -m 2
  Attempt to commit or push text file(s) using CR line endings
  in dea860dc51ec: f
  transaction abort!
  rollback completed
  abort: pretxncommit.cr hook failed
  [255]
  $ hg cat f | python print.py
  hello<LF>
  $ cat f | python print.py
  hello<CR>