Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/parser.py @ 22147:9ac98c2aa95c stable
histedit: preserve initial author on fold (issue4296)
When the authorship of the changeset folded in does not match that of
the base changeset, we currently use the configured ui.username
instead. This is especially surprising when the user is not the author
of either of the changesets. In such cases, the resulting authorship
(the user's) is clearly incorrect. Even when the user is folding in a
patch they authored themselves, it's not clear whether they should
take over the authorship. Let's instead keep it simple and always
preserve the base changeset's authorship. This is also how
"git rebase -i" handles folding/squashing.
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 13 Aug 2014 11:50:13 -0700 |
parents | 7c4778bc29f0 |
children | d647f97f88dd |
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# parser.py - simple top-down operator precedence parser for mercurial # # Copyright 2010 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> # # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. # see http://effbot.org/zone/simple-top-down-parsing.htm and # http://eli.thegreenplace.net/2010/01/02/top-down-operator-precedence-parsing/ # for background # takes a tokenizer and elements # tokenizer is an iterator that returns type, value pairs # elements is a mapping of types to binding strength, prefix and infix actions # an action is a tree node name, a tree label, and an optional match # __call__(program) parses program into a labeled tree import error from i18n import _ class parser(object): def __init__(self, tokenizer, elements, methods=None): self._tokenizer = tokenizer self._elements = elements self._methods = methods self.current = None def _advance(self): 'advance the tokenizer' t = self.current try: self.current = self._iter.next() except StopIteration: pass return t def _match(self, m, pos): 'make sure the tokenizer matches an end condition' if self.current[0] != m: raise error.ParseError(_("unexpected token: %s") % self.current[0], self.current[2]) self._advance() def _parse(self, bind=0): token, value, pos = self._advance() # handle prefix rules on current token prefix = self._elements[token][1] if not prefix: raise error.ParseError(_("not a prefix: %s") % token, pos) if len(prefix) == 1: expr = (prefix[0], value) else: if len(prefix) > 2 and prefix[2] == self.current[0]: self._match(prefix[2], pos) expr = (prefix[0], None) else: expr = (prefix[0], self._parse(prefix[1])) if len(prefix) > 2: self._match(prefix[2], pos) # gather tokens until we meet a lower binding strength while bind < self._elements[self.current[0]][0]: token, value, pos = self._advance() e = self._elements[token] # check for suffix - next token isn't a valid prefix if len(e) == 4 and not self._elements[self.current[0]][1]: suffix = e[3] expr = (suffix[0], expr) else: # handle infix rules if len(e) < 3 or not e[2]: raise error.ParseError(_("not an infix: %s") % token, pos) infix = e[2] if len(infix) == 3 and infix[2] == self.current[0]: self._match(infix[2], pos) expr = (infix[0], expr, (None)) else: expr = (infix[0], expr, self._parse(infix[1])) if len(infix) == 3: self._match(infix[2], pos) return expr def parse(self, message, lookup=None): 'generate a parse tree from a message' if lookup: self._iter = self._tokenizer(message, lookup) else: self._iter = self._tokenizer(message) self._advance() res = self._parse() token, value, pos = self.current return res, pos def eval(self, tree): 'recursively evaluate a parse tree using node methods' if not isinstance(tree, tuple): return tree return self._methods[tree[0]](*[self.eval(t) for t in tree[1:]]) def __call__(self, message): 'parse a message into a parse tree and evaluate if methods given' t = self.parse(message) if self._methods: return self.eval(t) return t