Mercurial > hg
view tests/svn/svndump-branches.sh @ 38483:3efadf2317c7
windows: add a method to convert Unix style command lines to Windows style
This started as a copy/paste of `os.path.expandvars()`, but limited to a given
dictionary of variables, converting `foo = foo + bar` to `foo += bar`, and
adding 'b' string prefixes. Then code was added to make sure that a value being
substituted in wouldn't itself be expanded by cmd.exe. But that left
inconsistent results between `$var1` and `%var1%` when its value was '%foo%'-
since neither were touched, `$var1` wouldn't expand but `%var1%` would. So
instead, this just converts the Unix style to Windows style (if the variable
exists, because Windows will leave `%missing%` as-is), and lets cmd.exe do its
thing.
I then dropped the %% -> % conversion (because Windows doesn't do this), and
added the ability to escape the '$' with '\'. The escape character is dropped,
for consistency with shell handling.
After everything seemed stable and working, running the whole test suite flagged
a problem near the end of test-bookmarks.t:1069. The problem is cmd.exe won't
pass empty variables to its child, so defined but empty variables are now
skipped. I can't think of anything better, and it seems like a pre-existing
violation of the documentation, which calls out that HG_OLDNODE is empty on
bookmark creation.
Future additions could potentially be replacing strong quotes with double quotes
(cmd.exe doesn't know what to do with the former), escaping a double quote, and
some tilde expansion via os.path.expanduser(). I've got some doubts about
replacing the strong quotes in case sh.exe is run, but it seems like the right
thing to do the vast majority of the time. The original form of this was
discussed about a year ago[1].
[1] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2017-July/100735.html
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 24 Jun 2018 01:13:09 -0400 |
parents | 6798536454e6 |
children |
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#!/bin/sh # # Use this script to generate branches.svndump # mkdir temp cd temp mkdir project-orig cd project-orig mkdir trunk mkdir branches cd .. svnadmin create svn-repo svnurl=file://`pwd`/svn-repo svn import project-orig $svnurl -m "init projA" svn co $svnurl project cd project echo a > trunk/a echo b > trunk/b echo c > trunk/c mkdir trunk/dir echo e > trunk/dir/e # Add a file within branches, used to confuse branch detection echo d > branches/notinbranch svn add trunk/a trunk/b trunk/c trunk/dir branches/notinbranch svn ci -m hello svn up # Branch to old svn copy trunk branches/old svn rm branches/old/c svn rm branches/old/dir svn ci -m "branch trunk, remove c and dir" svn up # Update trunk echo a >> trunk/a svn ci -m "change a" # Update old branch echo b >> branches/old/b svn ci -m "change b" # Create a cross-branch revision svn move trunk/b branches/old/c echo c >> branches/old/c svn ci -m "move and update c" # Update old branch again echo b >> branches/old/b svn ci -m "change b again" # Move back and forth between branch of similar names # This used to generate fake copy records svn up svn move branches/old branches/old2 svn ci -m "move to old2" svn move branches/old2 branches/old svn ci -m "move back to old" # Update trunk again echo a > trunk/a svn ci -m "last change to a" # Branch again from a converted revision svn copy -r 1 $svnurl/trunk branches/old3 svn ci -m "branch trunk@1 into old3" cd .. svnadmin dump svn-repo > ../branches.svndump