rebase: clear updatestate during rebase --abort in more cases
Previously, rebase --abort would only call update if you were on a node that had
already been rebased. This meant that if the rebase failed during the rebase of
the first commit, the working copy would be left dirty (with a .hg/updatestate
file) and rebase --abort would not have update to clean it up.
The fix is to also perform an update if you're still on the target node or on
the original working copy node (since the working copy may be dirty, we still
need to do the update). We don't want to perform an update in all cases though
because of
issue4009.
A subsequent patch makes this case much more common, since it causes the entire
rebase transaction to rollback during unexpected exceptions. This causes the
existing test-rebase-abort.t to cover this case.
$ hg init rep
$ cd rep
$ mkdir dir
$ touch foo dir/bar
$ hg -v addremove
adding dir/bar
adding foo
$ hg -v commit -m "add 1"
committing files:
dir/bar
foo
committing manifest
committing changelog
committed changeset 0:6f7f953567a2
$ cd dir/
$ touch ../foo_2 bar_2
$ hg -v addremove
adding dir/bar_2
adding foo_2
$ hg -v commit -m "add 2"
committing files:
dir/bar_2
foo_2
committing manifest
committing changelog
committed changeset 1:e65414bf35c5
$ cd ..
$ hg forget foo
$ hg -v addremove
adding foo
$ hg forget foo
#if windows
$ hg -v addremove nonexistent
nonexistent: The system cannot find the file specified
[1]
#else
$ hg -v addremove nonexistent
nonexistent: No such file or directory
[1]
#endif
$ cd ..
$ hg init subdir
$ cd subdir
$ mkdir dir
$ cd dir
$ touch a.py
$ hg addremove 'glob:*.py'
adding a.py
$ hg forget a.py
$ hg addremove -I 'glob:*.py'
adding a.py
$ hg forget a.py
$ hg addremove
adding dir/a.py
$ cd ..
$ hg init sim
$ cd sim
$ echo a > a
$ echo a >> a
$ echo a >> a
$ echo c > c
$ hg commit -Ama
adding a
adding c
$ mv a b
$ rm c
$ echo d > d
$ hg addremove -n -s 50 # issue 1696
removing a
adding b
removing c
adding d
recording removal of a as rename to b (100% similar)
$ hg addremove -s 50
removing a
adding b
removing c
adding d
recording removal of a as rename to b (100% similar)
$ hg commit -mb
$ cp b c
$ hg forget b
$ hg addremove -s 50
adding b
adding c
$ rm c
#if windows
$ hg ci -A -m "c" nonexistent
nonexistent: The system cannot find the file specified
abort: failed to mark all new/missing files as added/removed
[255]
#else
$ hg ci -A -m "c" nonexistent
nonexistent: No such file or directory
abort: failed to mark all new/missing files as added/removed
[255]
#endif
$ hg st
! c
$ cd ..