Move commands.forget over to using new walk code.
With no names, it now recursively forgets everything, as is the default
behaviour of other commands. And prints the names of all files it
hasn't specifically been told to forget.
#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# This is the mercurial setup script.
#
# './setup.py install', or
# './setup.py --help' for more options
import glob
from distutils.core import setup, Extension
from distutils.command.install_data import install_data
import mercurial.version
# specify version string, otherwise 'hg identify' will be used:
version = ''
class install_package_data(install_data):
def finalize_options(self):
self.set_undefined_options('install',
('install_lib', 'install_dir'))
install_data.finalize_options(self)
try:
mercurial.version.remember_version(version)
setup(name='mercurial',
version=mercurial.version.get_version(),
author='Matt Mackall',
author_email='mpm@selenic.com',
url='http://selenic.com/mercurial',
description='scalable distributed SCM',
license='GNU GPL',
packages=['mercurial'],
ext_modules=[Extension('mercurial.mpatch', ['mercurial/mpatch.c']),
Extension('mercurial.bdiff', ['mercurial/bdiff.c'])],
data_files=[('mercurial/templates',
['templates/map'] +
glob.glob('templates/map-*') +
glob.glob('templates/*.tmpl'))],
cmdclass = { 'install_data' : install_package_data },
scripts=['hg', 'hgmerge'])
finally:
mercurial.version.forget_version()