view contrib/simplemerge @ 27222:511a4384b033

setup: refactor handling of modules with C/Python implementations Previously, .py files under mercurial/pure/ were copied to mercurial/* during installation if we were performing a pure Python installation. Now that the new import hooks and module load policy are in place, this hackery from the past is no longer necessary. With this patch, we stop copying modules from mercurial/pure/* to mercurial/*. Instead, we preserve the files at their original hierarchy, mirroring the source repository structure. In addition, we always install the pure modules. Before, we would only include the pure modules in the distribution/installation if the install-time settings requested a pure Python installation. The upside of this change is that CPython and PyPy can run from the same Mercurial installation, making packaging and distribution of Mercurial simpler. The inclusion of pure Python modules in the installation sounds risky, as it could lead to inadvertent loading of non-C modules. This shouldn't be a problem. The default module load policy is "C only" (or at least will be shortly) and the only way to load pure modules from an installation is if a) pure installation was requested b) the HGMODULELOADPOLICY overrides the requirement for C modules. The default module load policy as defined in source is a special string whose default value from the checkout is equivalent to the "C only" policy (again, not exactly the state right now). For pure installations, this default policy is not appropriate and will not work. This patch adds support for rewriting __init__.py during installation to reflect the module load policy that should be in place accoding to the installation settings. For default CPython installs, the value in the source file will change but there will be no functional change. For pure installations, the default policy will be set to "py," allowing them to work without having to set environment variables.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Thu, 03 Dec 2015 21:48:12 -0800
parents 56b2bcea2529
children 863075fd4cd0
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#!/usr/bin/env python

from mercurial import demandimport
demandimport.enable()

import sys
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import error, simplemerge, fancyopts, util, ui

options = [('L', 'label', [], _('labels to use on conflict markers')),
           ('a', 'text', None, _('treat all files as text')),
           ('p', 'print', None,
            _('print results instead of overwriting LOCAL')),
           ('', 'no-minimal', None, _('no effect (DEPRECATED)')),
           ('h', 'help', None, _('display help and exit')),
           ('q', 'quiet', None, _('suppress output'))]

usage = _('''simplemerge [OPTS] LOCAL BASE OTHER

    Simple three-way file merge utility with a minimal feature set.

    Apply to LOCAL the changes necessary to go from BASE to OTHER.

    By default, LOCAL is overwritten with the results of this operation.
''')

class ParseError(Exception):
    """Exception raised on errors in parsing the command line."""

def showhelp():
    sys.stdout.write(usage)
    sys.stdout.write('\noptions:\n')

    out_opts = []
    for shortopt, longopt, default, desc in options:
        out_opts.append(('%2s%s' % (shortopt and '-%s' % shortopt,
                                    longopt and ' --%s' % longopt),
                         '%s' % desc))
    opts_len = max([len(opt[0]) for opt in out_opts])
    for first, second in out_opts:
        sys.stdout.write(' %-*s  %s\n' % (opts_len, first, second))

try:
    for fp in (sys.stdin, sys.stdout, sys.stderr):
        util.setbinary(fp)

    opts = {}
    try:
        args = fancyopts.fancyopts(sys.argv[1:], options, opts)
    except fancyopts.getopt.GetoptError, e:
        raise ParseError(e)
    if opts['help']:
        showhelp()
        sys.exit(0)
    if len(args) != 3:
            raise ParseError(_('wrong number of arguments'))
    sys.exit(simplemerge.simplemerge(ui.ui(), *args, **opts))
except ParseError, e:
    sys.stdout.write("%s: %s\n" % (sys.argv[0], e))
    showhelp()
    sys.exit(1)
except error.Abort, e:
    sys.stderr.write("abort: %s\n" % e)
    sys.exit(255)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
    sys.exit(255)