merge-tools: allow marking a mergetool as completely disabled
Very often in my life I'm finding that the only configured merge tool
present on the system is vimdiff[0], and it's currently impossible (as
far as I can tell) short of specifying `ui.merge = `[1] to actually
*disable* a merge tool. This allows vimdiff-haters to put:
[merge-tools]
vimdiff.disable = yes
in their ~/.hgrc and never see vimdiff again. I'm stopping short of
putting this as a commented out entry in the sample new user hgrc
(seen when a user runs `hg config --edit` with no ~/.hgrc) for now,
but I might come back and do that later.
0: vimdiff is at an awkward intersection: it's usually installed by
the vim package which is often installed as a vi substitute, so it's
mere presence doesn't imply me wanting it, unlike (say) kdiff3.
1: There's a related problem I ran into today where specifying
`ui.merge = :merge` failed because :merge isn't a command, which I
think is a regression. I'll try and figure that out and at least file
a bug.
test that a commit clears the merge state.
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ echo foo > file1
$ echo foo > file2
$ hg commit -Am 'add files'
adding file1
adding file2
$ echo bar >> file1
$ echo bar >> file2
$ hg commit -Am 'append bar to files'
create a second head with conflicting edits
$ hg up -C 0
2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ echo baz >> file1
$ echo baz >> file2
$ hg commit -Am 'append baz to files'
created new head
create a third head with no conflicting edits
$ hg up -qC 0
$ echo foo > file3
$ hg commit -Am 'add non-conflicting file'
adding file3
created new head
failing merge
$ hg up -qC 2
$ hg merge --tool=internal:fail 1
0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 2 files unresolved
use 'hg resolve' to retry unresolved file merges or 'hg update -C .' to abandon
[1]
resolve -l should contain unresolved entries
$ hg resolve -l
U file1
U file2
$ hg resolve -l --no-status
file1
file2
resolving an unknown path should emit a warning, but not for -l
$ hg resolve -m does-not-exist
arguments do not match paths that need resolving
$ hg resolve -l does-not-exist
resolve the failure
$ echo resolved > file1
$ hg resolve -m file1
resolve -l should show resolved file as resolved
$ hg resolve -l
R file1
U file2
$ hg resolve -l -Tjson
[
{
"path": "file1",
"status": "R"
},
{
"path": "file2",
"status": "U"
}
]
resolve -m without paths should mark all resolved
$ hg resolve -m
(no more unresolved files)
$ hg commit -m 'resolved'
resolve -l should be empty after commit
$ hg resolve -l
$ hg resolve -l -Tjson
[
]
resolve --all should abort when no merge in progress
$ hg resolve --all
abort: resolve command not applicable when not merging
[255]
resolve -m should abort when no merge in progress
$ hg resolve -m
abort: resolve command not applicable when not merging
[255]
set up conflict-free merge
$ hg up -qC 3
$ hg merge 1
2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
(branch merge, don't forget to commit)
resolve --all should do nothing in merge without conflicts
$ hg resolve --all
(no more unresolved files)
resolve -m should do nothing in merge without conflicts
$ hg resolve -m
(no more unresolved files)
get back to conflicting state
$ hg up -qC 2
$ hg merge --tool=internal:fail 1
0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 2 files unresolved
use 'hg resolve' to retry unresolved file merges or 'hg update -C .' to abandon
[1]
resolve without arguments should suggest --all
$ hg resolve
abort: no files or directories specified
(use --all to re-merge all unresolved files)
[255]
resolve --all should re-merge all unresolved files
$ hg resolve --all
merging file1
merging file2
warning: conflicts while merging file1! (edit, then use 'hg resolve --mark')
warning: conflicts while merging file2! (edit, then use 'hg resolve --mark')
[1]
$ cat file1.orig
foo
baz
$ cat file2.orig
foo
baz
$ grep '<<<' file1 > /dev/null
$ grep '<<<' file2 > /dev/null
resolve <file> should re-merge file
$ echo resolved > file1
$ hg resolve -q file1
warning: conflicts while merging file1! (edit, then use 'hg resolve --mark')
[1]
$ grep '<<<' file1 > /dev/null
resolve <file> should do nothing if 'file' was marked resolved
$ echo resolved > file1
$ hg resolve -m file1
$ hg resolve -q file1
$ cat file1
resolved
test crashed merge with empty mergestate
$ hg up -qC 1
$ mkdir .hg/merge
$ touch .hg/merge/state
resolve -l should be empty
$ hg resolve -l
$ cd ..