view tests/test-rebase-issue-noparam-single-rev.t @ 31393:8b6927eb7efd

util: don't use mutable default argument value I don't think this is any tight loops and we'd need to worry about PyObject creation overhead. Also, I'm pretty sure strptime() will be much slower than PyObject creation (date parsing is surprisingly slow).
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sun, 12 Mar 2017 21:54:32 -0700
parents aa4a1672583e
children 3b7cb3d17137
line wrap: on
line source

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
  > [extensions]
  > rebase=
  > 
  > [phases]
  > publish=False
  > 
  > [alias]
  > tglog = log -G --template "{rev}: '{desc}' {branches}\n"
  > EOF


  $ hg init a
  $ cd a

  $ echo c1 > c1
  $ hg ci -Am c1
  adding c1

  $ echo c2 > c2
  $ hg ci -Am c2
  adding c2

  $ echo l1 > l1
  $ hg ci -Am l1
  adding l1

  $ hg up -q -C 1

  $ echo r1 > r1
  $ hg ci -Am r1
  adding r1
  created new head

  $ echo r2 > r2
  $ hg ci -Am r2
  adding r2

  $ hg tglog
  @  4: 'r2'
  |
  o  3: 'r1'
  |
  | o  2: 'l1'
  |/
  o  1: 'c2'
  |
  o  0: 'c1'
  
Rebase with no arguments - single revision in source branch:

  $ hg up -q -C 2

  $ hg rebase
  rebasing 2:87c180a611f2 "l1"
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/a/.hg/strip-backup/87c180a611f2-a5be192d-backup.hg (glob)

  $ hg tglog
  @  4: 'l1'
  |
  o  3: 'r2'
  |
  o  2: 'r1'
  |
  o  1: 'c2'
  |
  o  0: 'c1'
  
  $ cd ..


  $ hg init b
  $ cd b

  $ echo c1 > c1
  $ hg ci -Am c1
  adding c1

  $ echo c2 > c2
  $ hg ci -Am c2
  adding c2

  $ echo l1 > l1
  $ hg ci -Am l1
  adding l1

  $ echo l2 > l2
  $ hg ci -Am l2
  adding l2

  $ hg up -q -C 1

  $ echo r1 > r1
  $ hg ci -Am r1
  adding r1
  created new head

  $ hg tglog
  @  4: 'r1'
  |
  | o  3: 'l2'
  | |
  | o  2: 'l1'
  |/
  o  1: 'c2'
  |
  o  0: 'c1'
  
Rebase with no arguments - single revision in target branch:

  $ hg up -q -C 3

  $ hg rebase
  rebasing 2:87c180a611f2 "l1"
  rebasing 3:1ac923b736ef "l2"
  saved backup bundle to $TESTTMP/b/.hg/strip-backup/87c180a611f2-b980535c-backup.hg (glob)

  $ hg tglog
  @  4: 'l2'
  |
  o  3: 'l1'
  |
  o  2: 'r1'
  |
  o  1: 'c2'
  |
  o  0: 'c1'
  

  $ cd ..