view tests/test-duplicateoptions.py @ 25881:9de443515f1d stable

help: scripting help topic There are a lot of non-human consumers of Mercurial. And the challenges and considerations for machines consuming Mercurial is significantly different from what humans face. I think there are enough special considerations around how machines consume Mercurial that a dedicated help topic is warranted. I concede the audience for this topic is probably small compared to the general audience. However, lots of normal Mercurial users do things like create one-off shell scripts for common workflows that I think this is useful enough to be in the install (as opposed to, say, a wiki page - which most users will likely never find). This text is by no means perfect. But you have to start somewhere. I think I did cover the important parts, though.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Sat, 18 Jul 2015 17:10:28 -0700
parents 352abbb0be88
children d289b8847f23
line wrap: on
line source

import os
from mercurial import ui, commands, extensions

ignore = set(['highlight', 'win32text', 'factotum'])

if os.name != 'nt':
    ignore.add('win32mbcs')

disabled = [ext for ext in extensions.disabled().keys() if ext not in ignore]

hgrc = open(os.environ["HGRCPATH"], 'w')
hgrc.write('[extensions]\n')

for ext in disabled:
    hgrc.write(ext + '=\n')

hgrc.close()

u = ui.ui()
extensions.loadall(u)

globalshort = set()
globallong = set()
for option in commands.globalopts:
    option[0] and globalshort.add(option[0])
    option[1] and globallong.add(option[1])

for cmd, entry in commands.table.iteritems():
    seenshort = globalshort.copy()
    seenlong = globallong.copy()
    for option in entry[1]:
        if (option[0] and option[0] in seenshort) or \
           (option[1] and option[1] in seenlong):
            print "command '" + cmd + "' has duplicate option " + str(option)
        seenshort.add(option[0])
        seenlong.add(option[1])