tests/test-copy-move-merge.t
author Martin Geisler <martin@geisler.net>
Thu, 19 Jul 2012 00:53:27 +0200
branchstable
changeset 17222 98823bd0d697
parent 15625 efdcce3fd2d5
child 16795 e9ae770eff1c
permissions -rw-r--r--
windows: removed duplicate termwidth definition Changeset dbf91976f900 caused this when the "from win32 import *" line was replaced with explicit import statements: the wildcard import was at the bottom of the file and so windows.termwidth was overwritten by win32.termwidth as indented, but the new explicit import statements were at the top and so win32.termwidth got lost. With the switch to ctypes, win32 can always be imported and so the fallback termwidth in windows is no longer needed.

  $ hg init t
  $ cd t

  $ echo 1 > a
  $ hg ci -qAm "first"

  $ hg cp a b
  $ hg mv a c
  $ echo 2 >> b
  $ echo 2 >> c

  $ hg ci -qAm "second"

  $ hg co -C 0
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 2 files removed, 0 files unresolved

  $ echo 0 > a
  $ echo 1 >> a

  $ hg ci -qAm "other"

  $ hg merge --debug
    searching for copies back to rev 1
    unmatched files in other:
     b
     c
    all copies found (* = to merge, ! = divergent):
     c -> a *
     b -> a *
    checking for directory renames
  resolving manifests
   overwrite: False, partial: False
   ancestor: b8bf91eeebbc, local: add3f11052fa+, remote: 17c05bb7fcb6
   a: remote moved to c -> m
   a: remote moved to b -> m
  preserving a for resolve of b
  preserving a for resolve of c
  removing a
  updating: a 1/2 files (50.00%)
  picked tool 'internal:merge' for b (binary False symlink False)
  merging a and b to b
  my b@add3f11052fa+ other b@17c05bb7fcb6 ancestor a@b8bf91eeebbc
   premerge successful
  updating: a 2/2 files (100.00%)
  picked tool 'internal:merge' for c (binary False symlink False)
  merging a and c to c
  my c@add3f11052fa+ other c@17c05bb7fcb6 ancestor a@b8bf91eeebbc
   premerge successful
  0 files updated, 2 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (branch merge, don't forget to commit)

file b
  $ cat b
  0
  1
  2

file c
  $ cat c
  0
  1
  2