Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-add.t @ 24924:41cd8171e58f stable
archive: always use portable path component separators with subrepos
The previous behavior when archiving a subrepo 's' on Windows was to internally
name the file under it 's\file', due to the use of vfs.reljoin(). When printing
the file list from the archive on Windows or Linux, the file was named
's\\file'. The archive extracted OK on Windows, but if the archive was brought
to a Linux system, it created a file named 's\file' instead of a directory 's'
containing 'file'.
*.zip format achives seemed not to have the problem, but this was definitely an
issue with *.tgz archives.
Largefiles actually got this right, but a test is added to keep this from
regressing. The subrepo-deep-nested-change.t test was repurposed to archive to
a file, since there are several subsequent tests that archive to a directory.
The output change is losing the filesystem prefix '../archive_lf' and not
listing the directories 'sub1' and 'sub1/sub2'.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 04 May 2015 22:33:29 -0400 |
parents | fff8b779e63a |
children | 1cce81121472 |
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$ hg init a $ cd a $ echo a > a $ hg add -n adding a $ hg st ? a $ hg add adding a $ hg st A a $ hg forget a $ hg add adding a $ hg st A a $ echo b > b $ hg add -n b $ hg st A a ? b $ hg add b $ hg st A a A b should fail $ hg add b b already tracked! $ hg st A a A b #if no-windows $ echo foo > con.xml $ hg --config ui.portablefilenames=jump add con.xml abort: ui.portablefilenames value is invalid ('jump') [255] $ hg --config ui.portablefilenames=abort add con.xml abort: filename contains 'con', which is reserved on Windows: 'con.xml' [255] $ hg st A a A b ? con.xml $ hg add con.xml warning: filename contains 'con', which is reserved on Windows: 'con.xml' $ hg st A a A b A con.xml $ hg forget con.xml $ rm con.xml #endif #if eol-in-paths $ echo bla > 'hello:world' $ hg --config ui.portablefilenames=abort add adding hello:world abort: filename contains ':', which is reserved on Windows: 'hello:world' [255] $ hg st A a A b ? hello:world $ hg --config ui.portablefilenames=ignore add adding hello:world $ hg st A a A b A hello:world #endif $ hg ci -m 0 --traceback should fail $ hg add a a already tracked! $ echo aa > a $ hg ci -m 1 $ hg up 0 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ echo aaa > a $ hg ci -m 2 created new head $ hg merge merging a warning: conflicts during merge. merging a incomplete! (edit conflicts, then use 'hg resolve --mark') 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 1 files unresolved use 'hg resolve' to retry unresolved file merges or 'hg update -C .' to abandon [1] $ hg st M a ? a.orig should fail $ hg add a a already tracked! $ hg st M a ? a.orig $ hg resolve -m a (no more unresolved files) $ hg ci -m merge Issue683: peculiarity with hg revert of an removed then added file $ hg forget a $ hg add a $ hg st ? a.orig $ hg rm a $ hg st R a ? a.orig $ echo a > a $ hg add a $ hg st M a ? a.orig Forgotten file can be added back (as either clean or modified) $ hg forget b $ hg add b $ hg st -A b C b $ hg forget b $ echo modified > b $ hg add b $ hg st -A b M b $ hg revert -qC b $ hg add c && echo "unexpected addition of missing file" c: * (glob) [1] $ echo c > c $ hg add d c && echo "unexpected addition of missing file" d: * (glob) [1] $ hg st M a A c ? a.orig $ hg up -C 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved forget and get should have the right order: added but missing dir should be forgotten before file with same name is added $ echo file d > d $ hg add d $ hg ci -md $ hg rm d $ mkdir d $ echo a > d/a $ hg add d/a $ rm -r d $ hg up -C 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ cat d file d Test that adding a directory doesn't require case matching (issue4578) #if icasefs $ mkdir -p CapsDir1/CapsDir $ echo abc > CapsDir1/CapsDir/AbC.txt $ mkdir CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir $ echo def > CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt $ hg add capsdir1/capsdir adding CapsDir1/CapsDir/AbC.txt (glob) adding CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt (glob) $ hg forget capsdir1/capsdir/abc.txt removing CapsDir1/CapsDir/AbC.txt (glob) $ hg forget capsdir1/capsdir removing CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt (glob) $ hg add capsdir1 adding CapsDir1/CapsDir/AbC.txt (glob) adding CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt (glob) $ hg ci -m "AbCDef" capsdir1/capsdir $ hg status -A capsdir1/capsdir C CapsDir1/CapsDir/AbC.txt C CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt $ hg files capsdir1/capsdir CapsDir1/CapsDir/AbC.txt (glob) CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt (glob) $ echo xyz > CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt $ hg ci -m xyz capsdir1/capsdir/subdir/def.txt $ hg revert -r '.^' capsdir1/capsdir reverting CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt (glob) The conditional tests above mean the hash on the diff line differs on Windows and OS X $ hg diff capsdir1/capsdir diff -r * CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt (glob) --- a/CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt * +0000 (glob) @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@ -xyz +def $ hg remove -f 'glob:**.txt' -X capsdir1/capsdir $ hg remove -f 'glob:**.txt' -I capsdir1/capsdir removing CapsDir1/CapsDir/AbC.txt (glob) removing CapsDir1/CapsDir/SubDir/Def.txt (glob) #endif $ cd ..