Mercurial > hg
view hgext/share.py @ 10753:a1cb8ca051c0 stable
wsgicgi: call close() on iterable to avoid resource leaks
Quoting PEP 333 (WSGI):
"If the iterable returned by the application has a close() method, the server
or gateway must call that method upon completion of the current request,
whether the request was completed normally, or terminated early due to
an error. (This is to support resource release by the application.
This protocol is intended to complement PEP 325's generator support,
and other common iterables with close() methods."
author | Konstantin Zemlyak <zart@zartsoft.ru> |
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date | Mon, 22 Mar 2010 15:16:27 +0100 |
parents | 25e572394f5c |
children | e46c19c586fa |
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# Copyright 2006, 2007 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. '''share a common history between several working directories''' from mercurial.i18n import _ from mercurial import hg, commands def share(ui, source, dest=None, noupdate=False): """create a new shared repository (experimental) Initialize a new repository and working directory that shares its history with another repository. NOTE: using rollback or extensions that destroy/modify history (mq, rebase, etc.) can cause considerable confusion with shared clones. In particular, if two shared clones are both updated to the same changeset, and one of them destroys that changeset with rollback, the other clone will suddenly stop working: all operations will fail with "abort: working directory has unknown parent". The only known workaround is to use debugsetparents on the broken clone to reset it to a changeset that still exists (e.g. tip). """ return hg.share(ui, source, dest, not noupdate) cmdtable = { "share": (share, [('U', 'noupdate', None, _('do not create a working copy'))], _('[-U] SOURCE [DEST]')), } commands.norepo += " share"