view tests/filterpyflakes.py @ 45448:85b03b1e4715

graphlog: use '%' only if there are *unresolved* conflicts In 14d0e89520a2, I made graphlog use '%' for the "other" context when there's an existing merge state. However, that has confused many people because it shows up even if all conflicts are already resolved, which makes it show up even after e.g. `hg update -m` with automatically resolved conflicts. This patch makes it so we show the '%' only if there still unresolved conflicts. This patch replaces my earlier attempt in D8930, where I decided to automatically clear the mergestate if there are no remaining conflicts. That had the problem that it wouldn't let the user re-resolve the conflicts using `hg resolve`. Note that an in-progress "proper" merge (one that will result in a commit with two parents, such as after `hg merge`) will already have two dirstate parents before the commit happens. That means that both sides of the merge will get drawn as '@' in the graph, since "is dirstate parent" takes precedence over "is involved in merge conflict". Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9007
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Thu, 10 Sep 2020 13:12:34 -0700
parents 2372284d9457
children c102b704edb5
line wrap: on
line source

#!/usr/bin/env python

# Filter output by pyflakes to control which warnings we check

from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import re
import sys

lines = []
for line in sys.stdin:
    # We blacklist tests that are too noisy for us
    pats = [
        r"undefined name 'WindowsError'",
        r"redefinition of unused '[^']+' from line",
        # for cffi, allow re-exports from pure.*
        r"cffi/[^:]*:.*\bimport \*' used",
        r"cffi/[^:]*:.*\*' imported but unused",
    ]

    keep = True
    for pat in pats:
        if re.search(pat, line):
            keep = False
            break  # pattern matches
    if keep:
        fn = line.split(':', 1)[0]
        f = open(fn)
        data = f.read()
        f.close()
        if 'no-' 'check-code' in data:
            continue
        lines.append(line)

for line in lines:
    sys.stdout.write(line)
print()