view mercurial/scmposix.py @ 30103:74cd33c9be76

parsers: use PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT The macro changed slightly in Python 3, introducing curly brackets that somehow confuse Clang into issuing a ton of compiler warnings. Using PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT makes these go away. It's worth noting that the code is identical: the 2nd argument to PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT is assigned to the ob_size field and is inserted immediately after "PyObject_HEAD_INIT(type)" is generated. Compilers are weird.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 08 Oct 2016 22:44:02 +0200
parents 39087ee88835
children c90a05124fae
line wrap: on
line source

from __future__ import absolute_import

import os
import sys

from . import (
    osutil,
)

def _rcfiles(path):
    rcs = [os.path.join(path, 'hgrc')]
    rcdir = os.path.join(path, 'hgrc.d')
    try:
        rcs.extend([os.path.join(rcdir, f)
                    for f, kind in osutil.listdir(rcdir)
                    if f.endswith(".rc")])
    except OSError:
        pass
    return rcs

def systemrcpath():
    path = []
    if sys.platform == 'plan9':
        root = 'lib/mercurial'
    else:
        root = 'etc/mercurial'
    # old mod_python does not set sys.argv
    if len(getattr(sys, 'argv', [])) > 0:
        p = os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(sys.argv[0]))
        if p != '/':
            path.extend(_rcfiles(os.path.join(p, root)))
    path.extend(_rcfiles('/' + root))
    return path

def userrcpath():
    if sys.platform == 'plan9':
        return [os.environ['home'] + '/lib/hgrc']
    else:
        return [os.path.expanduser('~/.hgrc')]