view tests/fakepatchtime.py @ 33501:7008f6819002

context: name files relative to cwd in warning messages I was several directories deep in the kernel tree, ran `hg add`, and got the warning about the size of one of the files. I noticed that it suggested undoing the add with a specific revert command. The problem is, it would have failed since the path printed was relative to the repo root instead of cwd. While here, I just fixed the other messages too. As an added benefit, these messages now look the same as the verbose/inexact messages for the corresponding command. I don't think most of these messages are reachable (typically the corresponding cmdutil function does the check). I wasn't able to figure out why the keyword tests were failing when using pathto()- I couldn't cause an absolute path to be used by manipulating the --cwd flag on a regular add. (I did notice that keyword is adding the file without holding wlock.)
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Tue, 11 Jul 2017 00:40:29 -0400
parents f624b0e69105
children 7be2f229285b
line wrap: on
line source

# extension to emulate invoking 'patch.internalpatch()' at the time
# specified by '[fakepatchtime] fakenow'

from __future__ import absolute_import

from mercurial import (
    extensions,
    patch as patchmod,
    util,
)

def internalpatch(orig, ui, repo, patchobj, strip,
                  prefix='', files=None,
                  eolmode='strict', similarity=0):
    if files is None:
        files = set()
    r = orig(ui, repo, patchobj, strip,
             prefix=prefix, files=files,
             eolmode=eolmode, similarity=similarity)

    fakenow = ui.config('fakepatchtime', 'fakenow')
    if fakenow:
        # parsing 'fakenow' in YYYYmmddHHMM format makes comparison between
        # 'fakenow' value and 'touch -t YYYYmmddHHMM' argument easy
        fakenow = util.parsedate(fakenow, ['%Y%m%d%H%M'])[0]
        for f in files:
            repo.wvfs.utime(f, (fakenow, fakenow))

    return r

def extsetup(ui):
    extensions.wrapfunction(patchmod, 'internalpatch', internalpatch)