clfilter: fallback to unfiltered version when linkrev point to filtered history
On `filectx`, linkrev may point to any revision in the repository. When the
repository is filtered this may lead to `filectx` trying to build `changectx`
for filtered revision. In such case we fallback to creating `changectx` on the
unfiltered version of the reposition. This fallback should not be an issue
because `changectx` from `filectx` are not used in complex operation that
care about filtering. It is complicated to work around the issue in a
clearer way as code raising such `filectx` rarely have access to the
repository directly.
Linkrevs create a lot of issue with filtering. It is stored in revlog entry at
creation time and never changed. Nothing prevent the changeset revision pointed
to become filtered. Several bogus behavior emerge from such situation. Those
bugs are complex to solve and not part of the current effort to install
filtering. This changeset is simple hack that prevent plain crash in favor on
minor misbehavior without visible effect.
This "hack" is longly documented in to code itself to help people that would
look at it in the future.
setup repo
$ hg init t
$ cd t
$ echo a > a
$ hg commit -Am'add a'
adding a
$ hg verify
checking changesets
checking manifests
crosschecking files in changesets and manifests
checking files
1 files, 1 changesets, 1 total revisions
$ hg parents
changeset: 0:1f0dee641bb7
tag: tip
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
summary: add a
rollback to null revision
$ hg status
$ hg rollback
repository tip rolled back to revision -1 (undo commit)
working directory now based on revision -1
$ hg verify
checking changesets
checking manifests
crosschecking files in changesets and manifests
checking files
0 files, 0 changesets, 0 total revisions
$ hg parents
$ hg status
A a
Two changesets this time so we rollback to a real changeset
$ hg commit -m'add a again'
$ echo a >> a
$ hg commit -m'modify a'
Test issue 902 (current branch is preserved)
$ hg branch test
marked working directory as branch test
(branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?)
$ hg rollback
repository tip rolled back to revision 0 (undo commit)
working directory now based on revision 0
$ hg branch
default
Test issue 1635 (commit message saved)
$ cat .hg/last-message.txt ; echo
modify a
Test rollback of hg before issue 902 was fixed
$ hg commit -m "test3"
$ hg branch test
marked working directory as branch test
(branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?)
$ rm .hg/undo.branch
$ hg rollback
repository tip rolled back to revision 0 (undo commit)
named branch could not be reset: current branch is still 'test'
working directory now based on revision 0
$ hg branch
test
working dir unaffected by rollback: do not restore dirstate et. al.
$ hg log --template '{rev} {branch} {desc|firstline}\n'
0 default add a again
$ hg status
M a
$ hg bookmark foo
$ hg commit -m'modify a again'
$ echo b > b
$ hg commit -Am'add b'
adding b
$ hg log --template '{rev} {branch} {desc|firstline}\n'
2 test add b
1 test modify a again
0 default add a again
$ hg update default
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg bookmark bar
$ cat .hg/undo.branch ; echo
test
$ hg rollback -f
repository tip rolled back to revision 1 (undo commit)
$ hg id -n
0
$ hg branch
default
$ cat .hg/bookmarks.current ; echo
bar
$ hg bookmark --delete foo
rollback by pretxncommit saves commit message (issue 1635)
$ echo a >> a
$ hg --config hooks.pretxncommit=false commit -m"precious commit message"
transaction abort!
rollback completed
abort: pretxncommit hook exited with status * (glob)
[255]
$ cat .hg/last-message.txt ; echo
precious commit message
same thing, but run $EDITOR
$ cat > editor.sh << '__EOF__'
> echo "another precious commit message" > "$1"
> __EOF__
$ HGEDITOR="\"sh\" \"`pwd`/editor.sh\"" hg --config hooks.pretxncommit=false commit 2>&1
transaction abort!
rollback completed
note: commit message saved in .hg/last-message.txt
abort: pretxncommit hook exited with status * (glob)
[255]
$ cat .hg/last-message.txt
another precious commit message
test rollback on served repository
#if serve
$ hg commit -m "precious commit message"
$ hg serve -p $HGPORT -d --pid-file=hg.pid -A access.log -E errors.log
$ cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
$ cd ..
$ hg clone http://localhost:$HGPORT u
requesting all changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 3 changesets with 2 changes to 1 files (+1 heads)
updating to branch default
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ cd u
$ hg id default
068774709090
now rollback and observe that 'hg serve' reloads the repository and
presents the correct tip changeset:
$ hg -R ../t rollback
repository tip rolled back to revision 1 (undo commit)
working directory now based on revision 0
$ hg id default
791dd2169706
#endif
update to older changeset and then refuse rollback, because
that would lose data (issue2998)
$ cd ../t
$ hg -q update
$ rm `hg status -un`
$ template='{rev}:{node|short} [{branch}] {desc|firstline}\n'
$ echo 'valuable new file' > b
$ echo 'valuable modification' >> a
$ hg commit -A -m'a valuable change'
adding b
$ hg update 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg rollback
abort: rollback of last commit while not checked out may lose data
(use -f to force)
[255]
$ hg tip -q
2:4d9cd3795eea
$ hg rollback -f
repository tip rolled back to revision 1 (undo commit)
$ hg status
$ hg log --removed b # yep, it's gone
same again, but emulate an old client that doesn't write undo.desc
$ hg -q update
$ echo 'valuable modification redux' >> a
$ hg commit -m'a valuable change redux'
$ rm .hg/undo.desc
$ hg update 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg rollback
rolling back unknown transaction
$ cat a
a
$ cd ..