Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/filelog.py @ 22300:35ab037de989
convert: introduce --full for converting all files
Convert will normally only process files that were changed in a source
revision, apply the filemap, and record it has a change in the target
repository. (If it ends up not really changing anything, nothing changes.)
That means that _if_ the filemap is changed before continuing an incremental
convert, the change will only kick in when the files it affects are modified in
a source revision and thus processed.
With --full, convert will make a full conversion every time and process
all files in the source repo and remove target repo files that shouldn't be
there. Filemap changes will thus kick in on the first converted revision, no
matter what is changed.
This flag should in most cases not make any difference but will make convert
significantly slower.
Other names has been considered for this feature, such as "resync", "sync",
"checkunmodified", "all" or "allfiles", but I found that they were less obvious
and required more explanation than "full" and were harder to describe
consistently.
author | Mads Kiilerich <madski@unity3d.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 26 Aug 2014 22:03:32 +0200 |
parents | 3bda242bf244 |
children | 4669e26747c3 |
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# filelog.py - file history class for mercurial # # Copyright 2005-2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. import revlog import re _mdre = re.compile('\1\n') def _parsemeta(text): """return (metadatadict, keylist, metadatasize)""" # text can be buffer, so we can't use .startswith or .index if text[:2] != '\1\n': return None, None, None s = _mdre.search(text, 2).start() mtext = text[2:s] meta = {} keys = [] for l in mtext.splitlines(): k, v = l.split(": ", 1) meta[k] = v keys.append(k) return meta, keys, (s + 2) def _packmeta(meta, keys=None): if not keys: keys = sorted(meta.iterkeys()) return "".join("%s: %s\n" % (k, meta[k]) for k in keys) class filelog(revlog.revlog): def __init__(self, opener, path): super(filelog, self).__init__(opener, "/".join(("data", path + ".i"))) def read(self, node): t = self.revision(node) if not t.startswith('\1\n'): return t s = t.index('\1\n', 2) return t[s + 2:] def add(self, text, meta, transaction, link, p1=None, p2=None): if meta or text.startswith('\1\n'): text = "\1\n%s\1\n%s" % (_packmeta(meta), text) return self.addrevision(text, transaction, link, p1, p2) def renamed(self, node): if self.parents(node)[0] != revlog.nullid: return False t = self.revision(node) m = _parsemeta(t)[0] if m and "copy" in m: return (m["copy"], revlog.bin(m["copyrev"])) return False def size(self, rev): """return the size of a given revision""" # for revisions with renames, we have to go the slow way node = self.node(rev) if self.renamed(node): return len(self.read(node)) # XXX if self.read(node).startswith("\1\n"), this returns (size+4) return super(filelog, self).size(rev) def cmp(self, node, text): """compare text with a given file revision returns True if text is different than what is stored. """ t = text if text.startswith('\1\n'): t = '\1\n\1\n' + text samehashes = not super(filelog, self).cmp(node, t) if samehashes: return False # renaming a file produces a different hash, even if the data # remains unchanged. Check if it's the case (slow): if self.renamed(node): t2 = self.read(node) return t2 != text return True def _file(self, f): return filelog(self.opener, f)