Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/i18n.py @ 35849:5cfdf6137af8
setdiscovery: don't call "heads" wire command when heads specified
Our custom server has too many heads to announce (one per code review,
plus a public head), but it still lets the user request one of them by
doing
hg pull -r <some expression>
After the client has resolved the expression to a set of nodeids by
calling the "lookup" wire command, it will start the discovery
phase. Before this patch, that doesn't take the requested heads into
account and unconditionally calls the server's "heads" command to find
all its heads. One consequence of that the "all remote heads known
locally" case triggers if the client already had the public head and
the user will see a "no changes found" message that's unrelated to the
head they requested. That message confused me for a while. More
imporantly, it also means that pullop.cgresult incorrectly (given our
arguably misbehaving server) gets set to 0 (no changesets added),
which confused some of our extensions.
This patch makes it so the client skips the "heads" command if the
user requested specific revisions.
Since the "heads" command is normally batched with the first "known"
command and calculating the list of heads is probably cheap, I don't
expect much improvement in speed from this.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1962
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 01 Feb 2018 10:29:24 -0800 |
parents | d00ec62d156f |
children | aeaf9c7f7528 |
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# i18n.py - internationalization support for mercurial # # Copyright 2005, 2006 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. from __future__ import absolute_import import gettext as gettextmod import locale import os import sys from . import ( encoding, pycompat, ) # modelled after templater.templatepath: if getattr(sys, 'frozen', None) is not None: module = pycompat.sysexecutable else: module = pycompat.fsencode(__file__) try: unicode except NameError: unicode = str _languages = None if (pycompat.iswindows and 'LANGUAGE' not in encoding.environ and 'LC_ALL' not in encoding.environ and 'LC_MESSAGES' not in encoding.environ and 'LANG' not in encoding.environ): # Try to detect UI language by "User Interface Language Management" API # if no locale variables are set. Note that locale.getdefaultlocale() # uses GetLocaleInfo(), which may be different from UI language. # (See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd374098(v=VS.85).aspx ) try: import ctypes langid = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetUserDefaultUILanguage() _languages = [locale.windows_locale[langid]] except (ImportError, AttributeError, KeyError): # ctypes not found or unknown langid pass _ugettext = None def setdatapath(datapath): datapath = pycompat.fsdecode(datapath) localedir = os.path.join(datapath, pycompat.sysstr('locale')) t = gettextmod.translation('hg', localedir, _languages, fallback=True) global _ugettext try: _ugettext = t.ugettext except AttributeError: _ugettext = t.gettext _msgcache = {} # encoding: {message: translation} def gettext(message): """Translate message. The message is looked up in the catalog to get a Unicode string, which is encoded in the local encoding before being returned. Important: message is restricted to characters in the encoding given by sys.getdefaultencoding() which is most likely 'ascii'. """ # If message is None, t.ugettext will return u'None' as the # translation whereas our callers expect us to return None. if message is None or not _ugettext: return message cache = _msgcache.setdefault(encoding.encoding, {}) if message not in cache: if type(message) is unicode: # goofy unicode docstrings in test paragraphs = message.split(u'\n\n') else: paragraphs = [p.decode("ascii") for p in message.split('\n\n')] # Be careful not to translate the empty string -- it holds the # meta data of the .po file. u = u'\n\n'.join([p and _ugettext(p) or u'' for p in paragraphs]) try: # encoding.tolocal cannot be used since it will first try to # decode the Unicode string. Calling u.decode(enc) really # means u.encode(sys.getdefaultencoding()).decode(enc). Since # the Python encoding defaults to 'ascii', this fails if the # translated string use non-ASCII characters. encodingstr = pycompat.sysstr(encoding.encoding) cache[message] = u.encode(encodingstr, "replace") except LookupError: # An unknown encoding results in a LookupError. cache[message] = message return cache[message] def _plain(): if ('HGPLAIN' not in encoding.environ and 'HGPLAINEXCEPT' not in encoding.environ): return False exceptions = encoding.environ.get('HGPLAINEXCEPT', '').strip().split(',') return 'i18n' not in exceptions if _plain(): _ = lambda message: message else: _ = gettext