Mercurial > hg
view rust/rhg/README.md @ 51723:9367571fea21
cext: correct the argument handling of `b85encode()`
The type stub indicated that this argument is `Optional`, which implies None is
allowed. I don't see in the documentation where that's the case for `i`[1], and
trying it in `hg debugshell` resulted in the method failing with a TypeError. I
guess it was typed as an `int` argument because the `p` format unit wasn't added
until Python 3.3[2].
In any event, 2 clients in core (`pvec` and `obsolete`) call this with no
argument supplied, and `mdiff` calls it with True. So I guess we've avoided the
None arg case, and when no arg is supplied, it defaults to the 0 initialization
of the `pad` variable in C. Since the `p` format unit accepts both `int` and
None, as well as `bool`, I'm not bothering to bump the module version- this code
is more permissive than it was, in addition to being more correct.
Interestingly, when I first imported the `cext` and `pure` methods in the same
manner as the previous commit, it dropped the `Optional` part of the argument
type when generating `util.pyi`. No idea why.
[1] https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/arg.html#numbers
[2] https://docs.python.org/3/c-api/arg.html#other-objects
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 20 Jul 2024 01:55:09 -0400 |
parents | b1c20e41098f |
children |
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# `rhg` The `rhg` executable implements a subset of the functionnality of `hg` using only Rust, to avoid the startup cost of a Python interpreter. This subset is initially small but grows over time as `rhg` is improved. When fallback to the Python implementation is configured (see below), `rhg` aims to be a drop-in replacement for `hg` that should behave the same, except that some commands run faster. ## Building To compile `rhg`, either run `cargo build --release` from this `rust/rhg/` directory, or run `make build-rhg` from the repository root. The executable can then be found at `rust/target/release/rhg`. ## Mercurial configuration `rhg` reads Mercurial configuration from the usual sources: the user’s `~/.hgrc`, a repository’s `.hg/hgrc`, command line `--config`, etc. It has some specific configuration in the `[rhg]` section. See `hg help config.rhg` for details. ## Installation and configuration example For example, to install `rhg` as `hg` for the current user with fallback to the system-wide install of Mercurial, and allow it to run even though the `rebase` and `absorb` extensions are enabled, on a Unix-like platform: * Build `rhg` (see above) * Make sure the `~/.local/bin` exists and is in `$PATH` * From the repository root, make a symbolic link with `ln -s rust/target/release/rhg ~/.local/bin/hg` * Configure `~/.hgrc` with: ``` [rhg] on-unsupported = fallback fallback-executable = /usr/bin/hg allowed-extensions = rebase, absorb ``` * Check that the output of running `hg notarealsubcommand` starts with `hg: unknown command`, which indicates fallback. * Check that the output of running `hg notarealsubcommand --config rhg.on-unsupported=abort` starts with `unsupported feature:`.