lfs: autoload the extension when cloning from repo with lfs enabled
This is based on a patch by Gregory Szorc. I made small adjustments to
clean up the messaging when the server has the extension enabled, but the
client has it disabled (to prevent autoloading). Additionally, I added
a second server capability to distinguish between the server having the
extension enabled, and the server having LFS commits. This helps prevent
unnecessary requirement propagation- the client shouldn't add a requirement
that the server doesn't have, just because the server had the extension
loaded. The TODO I had about advertising a capability when the server can
natively serve up blobs isn't relevant anymore (we've had 2 releases that
support this), so I dropped it.
Currently, we lazily add the "lfs" requirement to a repo when we first
encounter LFS data. Due to a pretxnchangegroup hook that looks for LFS
data, this can happen at the end of clone.
Now that we have more control over how repositories are created, we can
do better.
This commit adds a repo creation option to add the "lfs" requirement.
hg.clone() sets this creation option if the remote peer is advertising
lfs usage (as opposed to just support needed to push).
So, what this change effectively does is have cloned repos
automatically inherit the "lfs" requirement.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5130
This test doesn't yet work due to the way fsmonitor is integrated with test runner
$ exit 80
test sparse interaction with other extensions
$ hg init myrepo
$ cd myrepo
$ cat > .hg/hgrc <<EOF
> [extensions]
> sparse=
> strip=
> EOF
Test fsmonitor integration (if available)
TODO: make fully isolated integration test a'la https://github.com/facebook/watchman/blob/master/tests/integration/WatchmanInstance.py
(this one is using the systemwide watchman instance)
$ touch .watchmanconfig
$ echo "ignoredir1/" >> .hgignore
$ hg commit -Am ignoredir1
adding .hgignore
$ echo "ignoredir2/" >> .hgignore
$ hg commit -m ignoredir2
$ hg sparse --reset
$ hg sparse -I ignoredir1 -I ignoredir2 -I dir1
$ mkdir ignoredir1 ignoredir2 dir1
$ touch ignoredir1/file ignoredir2/file dir1/file
Run status twice to compensate for a condition in fsmonitor where it will check
ignored files the second time it runs, regardless of previous state (ask @sid0)
$ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor=
? dir1/file
$ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor=
? dir1/file
Test that fsmonitor ignore hash check updates when .hgignore changes
$ hg up -q ".^"
$ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor=
? dir1/file
? ignoredir2/file