Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-issue660.t @ 21990:48e32c2c499b stable
context: call normal on the right object
dirstate.normal is the method that marks files as unchanged/normal.
Rev 20a30cd41d21 started caching dirstate.normal in order to improve
performance. However, there was an error in the patch: taking the wlock, under
some conditions depending on platform, can cause a new dirstate object to be
created. Caching dirstate.normal before calling wlock would then cause the
fixup calls below to be on the old dirstate object, effectively disappearing
into the ether.
On Unix and Unix-like OSes, the condition under which we create a new dirstate
object is 'the dirstate file has been modified since the last time we opened
it'. This happens pretty rarely, so the object is usually the same -- there's
little impact.
On Windows, the condition is 'always'. This means files in the lookup state are
never marked normal, so the bug has a serious performance impact since all the
files in the lookup state are re-read every time hg status is run.
author | Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 01 Aug 2014 18:30:18 -0700 |
parents | 8b190adb7ee3 |
children | 2fc86d92c4a9 |
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http://mercurial.selenic.com/bts/issue660 and: http://mercurial.selenic.com/bts/issue322 $ hg init $ echo a > a $ mkdir b $ echo b > b/b $ hg commit -A -m "a is file, b is dir" adding a adding b/b File replaced with directory: $ rm a $ mkdir a $ echo a > a/a Should fail - would corrupt dirstate: $ hg add a/a abort: file 'a' in dirstate clashes with 'a/a' [255] Removing shadow: $ hg rm --after a Should succeed - shadow removed: $ hg add a/a Directory replaced with file: $ rm -r b $ echo b > b Should fail - would corrupt dirstate: $ hg add b abort: directory 'b' already in dirstate [255] Removing shadow: $ hg rm --after b/b Should succeed - shadow removed: $ hg add b Look what we got: $ hg st A a/a A b R a R b/b Revert reintroducing shadow - should fail: $ rm -r a b $ hg revert b/b abort: file 'b' in dirstate clashes with 'b/b' [255] Revert all - should succeed: $ hg revert --all undeleting a forgetting a/a (glob) forgetting b undeleting b/b (glob) $ hg st Issue3423: $ hg forget a $ echo zed > a $ hg revert a $ hg st ? a.orig $ rm a.orig addremove: $ rm -r a b $ mkdir a $ echo a > a/a $ echo b > b $ hg addremove -s 0 removing a adding a/a adding b removing b/b $ hg st A a/a A b R a R b/b commit: $ hg ci -A -m "a is dir, b is file" $ hg st --all C a/a C b Long directory replaced with file: $ mkdir d $ mkdir d/d $ echo d > d/d/d $ hg commit -A -m "d is long directory" adding d/d/d $ rm -r d $ echo d > d Should fail - would corrupt dirstate: $ hg add d abort: directory 'd' already in dirstate [255] Removing shadow: $ hg rm --after d/d/d Should succeed - shadow removed: $ hg add d $ hg ci -md Update should work at least with clean working directory: $ rm -r a b d $ hg up -r 0 2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg st --all C a C b/b $ rm -r a b $ hg up -r 1 2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg st --all C a/a C b