view tests/test-show.t @ 42054:399ed3e86a49

py2exe: add workaround to allow bundling of hgext3rd.* extensions py2exe doesn't know how to handle namespace packages *at all*, so it treats them like normal packages. As a result, if we try and bundle hgext3rd.evolve in a py2exe build, it won't work if we install evolve into the virtualenv. In order to work around this, tortoisehg installs hgext3rd.evolve etc into its staged hg directory, since it doesn't use a virtualenv. As a workaround for us, we'll just allow any extra packages users want bundled are part of hg during the pseudo-install phase that py2exe uses. I'm not happy about this, but it *works*. As a sample of how you'd make an MSI with evolve bundled: import os import shutil import subprocess import tempfile def stage_evolve(version): """Stage evolve for inclusion in py2exe binary.""" with tempfile.TemporaryDirectory() as temp: evolve = os.path.join(temp, "evolve") subprocess.check_call([ "hg.exe", "clone", "https://www.mercurial-scm.org/repo/evolve/", "--update", version, evolve, ]) dest = os.path.join('..', 'hgext3rd', 'evolve') if os.path.exists(dest): shutil.rmtree(dest) shutil.copytree(os.path.join(evolve, "hgext3rd", "evolve"), dest) def main(): stage_evolve('tip') print("\0") print("hgext3rd") print("hgext3rd.evolve") print("hgext3rd.evolve.hack") print("hgext3rd.evolve.thirdparty") if __name__ == "__main__": main() is a script you can pass to the wix/build.py as --extra-packages-script, and the resulting .msi will have an hg binary with evolve baked in. users will still need to enable evolve in their hgrc, so you'd probably also want to bundle configs in your msi for an enterprise environment, but that's already easy to do with the support for extra features and wxs files in the wix build process. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6189
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
date Wed, 03 Apr 2019 11:46:29 -0400
parents e6b5e7329ff2
children 51057ab0dffa
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  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [extensions]
  > show =
  > EOF

No arguments shows available views

  $ hg init empty
  $ cd empty
  $ hg show
  available views:
  
  bookmarks -- bookmarks and their associated changeset
  stack -- current line of work
  work -- changesets that aren't finished
  
  abort: no view requested
  (use "hg show VIEW" to choose a view)
  [255]

`hg help show` prints available views

  $ hg help show
  hg show VIEW
  
  show various repository information
  
      A requested view of repository data is displayed.
  
      If no view is requested, the list of available views is shown and the
      command aborts.
  
      Note:
         There are no backwards compatibility guarantees for the output of this
         command. Output may change in any future Mercurial release.
  
         Consumers wanting stable command output should specify a template via
         "-T/--template".
  
      List of available views:
  
      bookmarks   bookmarks and their associated changeset
  
      stack       current line of work
  
      work        changesets that aren't finished
  
  (use 'hg help -e show' to show help for the show extension)
  
  options:
  
   -T --template TEMPLATE display with template
  
  (some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help)

Unknown view prints error

  $ hg show badview
  abort: unknown view: badview
  (run "hg show" to see available views)
  [255]

HGPLAIN results in abort

  $ HGPLAIN=1 hg show bookmarks
  abort: must specify a template in plain mode
  (invoke with -T/--template to control output format)
  [255]

But not if a template is specified

  $ HGPLAIN=1 hg show bookmarks -T '{bookmark}\n'
  (no bookmarks set)

  $ cd ..

bookmarks view with no bookmarks prints empty message

  $ hg init books
  $ cd books
  $ touch f0
  $ hg -q commit -A -m initial

  $ hg show bookmarks
  (no bookmarks set)

bookmarks view shows bookmarks in an aligned table

  $ echo book1 > f0
  $ hg commit -m 'commit for book1'
  $ echo book2 > f0
  $ hg commit -m 'commit for book2'

  $ hg bookmark -r 1 book1
  $ hg bookmark a-longer-bookmark

  $ hg show bookmarks
  * a-longer-bookmark    7b57
    book1                b757

A custom bookmarks template works

  $ hg show bookmarks -T '{node} {bookmark} {active}\n'
  7b5709ab64cbc34da9b4367b64afff47f2c4ee83 a-longer-bookmark True
  b757f780b8ffd71267c6ccb32e0882d9d32a8cc0 book1 False

bookmarks JSON works

  $ hg show bookmarks -T json
  [
   {
    "active": true,
    "bookmark": "a-longer-bookmark",
    "longestbookmarklen": 17,
    "node": "7b5709ab64cbc34da9b4367b64afff47f2c4ee83",
    "nodelen": 4
   },
   {
    "active": false,
    "bookmark": "book1",
    "longestbookmarklen": 17,
    "node": "b757f780b8ffd71267c6ccb32e0882d9d32a8cc0",
    "nodelen": 4
   }
  ]

JSON works with no bookmarks

  $ hg book -d a-longer-bookmark
  $ hg book -d book1
  $ hg show bookmarks -T json
  [
  ]

commands.show.aliasprefix aliases values to `show <view>`

  $ hg --config commands.show.aliasprefix=s sbookmarks
  (no bookmarks set)

  $ hg --config commands.show.aliasprefix=sh shwork
  @  7b57 commit for book2
  o  b757 commit for book1
  o  ba59 initial

  $ hg --config commands.show.aliasprefix='s sh' swork
  @  7b57 commit for book2
  o  b757 commit for book1
  o  ba59 initial

  $ hg --config commands.show.aliasprefix='s sh' shwork
  @  7b57 commit for book2
  o  b757 commit for book1
  o  ba59 initial

The aliases don't appear in `hg config`

  $ hg --config commands.show.aliasprefix=s config alias
  [1]

Doesn't overwrite existing alias

  $ hg --config alias.swork='log -r .' --config commands.show.aliasprefix=s swork
  changeset:   2:7b5709ab64cb
  tag:         tip
  user:        test
  date:        Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
  summary:     commit for book2
  

  $ hg --config alias.swork='log -r .' --config commands.show.aliasprefix=s config alias
  alias.swork=log -r .

  $ cd ..