view tests/test-diff-newlines.t @ 23444:88629daa727b

merge: demonstrate that directory renames can lose local file content When a directory has been renamed on the local branch and a file has been added in the old location on a remote branch, we move that new file to the new location. Unfortunately, if there is already a file there, we overwrite it with the contents from the remote branch. For untracked local files, we should probably abort, and for tracked local files, we should merge the contents. To start with, let's add a test to demonstrate the breakage. Also note that while files merged in from a remote branch are normally (and unintuitively) reported as modified, these files are reported as added.
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Tue, 02 Dec 2014 13:28:07 -0800
parents c63a09b6b337
children aaa1f8f514cf
line wrap: on
line source

  $ hg init

  $ $PYTHON -c 'file("a", "wb").write("confuse str.splitlines\nembedded\rnewline\n")'
  $ hg ci -Ama -d '1 0'
  adding a

  $ echo clean diff >> a
  $ hg ci -mb -d '2 0'

  $ hg diff -r0 -r1
  diff -r 107ba6f817b5 -r 310ce7989cdc a
  --- a/a	Thu Jan 01 00:00:01 1970 +0000
  +++ b/a	Thu Jan 01 00:00:02 1970 +0000
  @@ -1,2 +1,3 @@
   confuse str.splitlines
   embedded\r (no-eol) (esc)
  newline
  +clean diff