view contrib/dumprevlog @ 13026:53391819f195

check-code: catch Python 'is' comparing number or string literals The Python 'is' operator compares object identity, so it should definitely not be applied to string or number literals, which Python implementations are free to represent with a temporary object. This should catch the following kinds of bogus expressions (examples): x is 'foo' x is not 'foo' x is "bar" x is not "bar" x is 42 x is not 42 x is -36 x is not -36 As originally proposed by Martin Geisler, amended with catching negative numbers.
author Adrian Buehlmann <adrian@cadifra.com>
date Sun, 21 Nov 2010 11:52:27 +0100
parents 9fe97eea5510
children 659f34b833b9
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#!/usr/bin/env python
# Dump revlogs as raw data stream
# $ find .hg/store/ -name "*.i" | xargs dumprevlog > repo.dump

import sys
from mercurial import revlog, node, util

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

for f in sys.argv[1:]:
    binopen = lambda fn: open(fn, 'rb')
    r = revlog.revlog(binopen, f)
    print "file:", f
    for i in r:
        n = r.node(i)
        p = r.parents(n)
        d = r.revision(n)
        print "node:", node.hex(n)
        print "linkrev:", r.linkrev(i)
        print "parents:", node.hex(p[0]), node.hex(p[1])
        print "length:", len(d)
        print "-start-"
        print d
        print "-end-"