Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-convert-cvs-synthetic.t @ 28443:49d65663d7e4
fsmonitor: hook up state-enter, state-leave signals
Keeping the codebase in sync with upstream:
Watchman 4.4 introduced an advanced settling feature that allows publishing
tools to notify subscribing tools of the boundaries for important filesystem
operations.
https://facebook.github.io/watchman/docs/cmd/subscribe.html#advanced-settling
has more information about how this feature works.
This diff connects a signal that we're calling `hg.update` to the mercurial
update function so that mercurial can indirectly notify tools (such as IDEs or
build machinery) when it is changing the working copy. This will allow those
tools to pause their normal actions as the files are changing and defer them
until the end of the operation.
In addition to sending the enter/leave signals for the state, we are able to
publish useful metadata along the same channel. In this case we are passing
the following pieces of information:
1. destination revision hash
2. An estimate of the distance between the current state and the target state
3. A success indicator.
4. Whether it is a partial update
The distance is estimate may be useful to tools that wish to change their
strategy after the update has complete. For example, a large update may be
efficient to deal with by walking some internal state in the subscriber rather
than feeding every individual file notification through its normal (small)
delta mechanism.
We estimate the distance by comparing the repository revision number. In some
cases we cannot come up with a number so we report 0. This is ok; we're
offering this for informational purposes only and don't guarantee its accuracy.
The success indicator is only really meaningful when we generate the
state-leave notification; it indicates the overall success of the update.
author | Martijn Pieters <mjpieters@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 10 Mar 2016 16:04:09 +0000 |
parents | 96529f81e2e9 |
children | e5e5ee2b60e4 |
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#require cvs112 This feature requires use of builtin cvsps! $ echo "[extensions]" >> $HGRCPATH $ echo "convert = " >> $HGRCPATH create cvs repository with one project $ mkdir cvsrepo $ cd cvsrepo $ CVSROOT=`pwd` $ export CVSROOT $ CVS_OPTIONS=-f $ export CVS_OPTIONS $ cd .. $ rmdir cvsrepo $ cvscall() > { > cvs -f "$@" > } output of 'cvs ci' varies unpredictably, so just discard it $ cvsci() > { > sleep 1 > cvs -f ci "$@" >/dev/null > } $ cvscall -d "$CVSROOT" init $ mkdir cvsrepo/proj $ cvscall -q co proj create file1 on the trunk $ cd proj $ touch file1 $ cvscall -Q add file1 $ cvsci -m"add file1 on trunk" file1 create two branches $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_0 T file1 $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_1 T file1 create file2 on branch v1_0 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_0 $ touch file2 $ cvscall -Q add file2 $ cvsci -m"add file2" file2 create file3, file4 on branch v1_1 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_1 $ touch file3 $ touch file4 $ cvscall -Q add file3 file4 $ cvsci -m"add file3, file4 on branch v1_1" file3 file4 merge file2 from v1_0 to v1_1 $ cvscall -Q up -jv1_0 $ cvsci -m"MERGE from v1_0: add file2" cvs commit: Examining . Step things up a notch: now we make the history really hairy, with changes bouncing back and forth between trunk and v1_2 and merges going both ways. (I.e., try to model the real world.) create branch v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -A $ cvscall -q tag -b v1_2 T file1 create file5 on branch v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_2 $ touch file5 $ cvs -Q add file5 $ cvsci -m"add file5 on v1_2" cvs commit: Examining . create file6 on trunk post-v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -A $ touch file6 $ cvscall -Q add file6 $ cvsci -m"add file6 on trunk post-v1_2" cvs commit: Examining . merge file5 from v1_2 to trunk $ cvscall -Q up -A $ cvscall -Q up -jv1_2 file5 $ cvsci -m"MERGE from v1_2: add file5" cvs commit: Examining . merge file6 from trunk to v1_2 $ cvscall -Q up -rv1_2 $ cvscall up -jHEAD file6 U file6 $ cvsci -m"MERGE from HEAD: add file6" cvs commit: Examining . cvs rlog output $ cvscall -q rlog proj | egrep '^(RCS file|revision)' RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file1,v revision 1.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file2,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.4.2 revision 1.1.4.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file3,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/Attic/file4,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file5,v revision 1.2 revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.1 RCS file: $TESTTMP/cvsrepo/proj/file6,v revision 1.1 revision 1.1.2.2 revision 1.1.2.1 convert to hg (#1) $ cd .. $ hg convert --datesort proj proj.hg initializing destination proj.hg repository connecting to $TESTTMP/cvsrepo scanning source... collecting CVS rlog 15 log entries creating changesets 9 changeset entries sorting... converting... 8 add file1 on trunk 7 add file2 6 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 5 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 3 add file5 on v1_2 2 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 1 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 0 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 hg log -G output (#1) $ hg -R proj.hg log -G --template "{rev} {desc}\n" o 8 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 | | o 7 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 | | o | 6 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 | | | o 5 add file5 on v1_2 | | | | o 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 | | | o | | 3 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. |/ / | o 2 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 |/ | o 1 add file2 |/ o 0 add file1 on trunk convert to hg (#2: with merge detection) $ hg convert \ > --config convert.cvsps.mergefrom='"^MERGE from (\S+):"' \ > --datesort \ > proj proj.hg2 initializing destination proj.hg2 repository connecting to $TESTTMP/cvsrepo scanning source... collecting CVS rlog 15 log entries creating changesets 9 changeset entries sorting... converting... 8 add file1 on trunk 7 add file2 6 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 5 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 3 add file5 on v1_2 2 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 1 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 0 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 hg log -G output (#2) $ hg -R proj.hg2 log -G --template "{rev} {desc}\n" o 8 MERGE from v1_2: add file5 | | o 7 MERGE from HEAD: add file6 | | o | 6 add file6 on trunk post-v1_2 | | | o 5 add file5 on v1_2 | | | | o 4 add file3, file4 on branch v1_1 | | | o | | 3 file file3 was initially added on branch v1_1. |/ / | o 2 MERGE from v1_0: add file2 |/ | o 1 add file2 |/ o 0 add file1 on trunk