rebase: turn rebaseskipobsolete on by default
Consider the following use case. User has a set of commits he wants to rebase
onto some destination. Some of the commits in the set are already rebased
and their new versions are now among the ancestors of destination. Traditional
rebase behavior would make the rebase and effectively try to apply older
versions of these commits on top of newer versions, like this:
a` --> b --> a`
(where both 'a`' and 'a``' are rebased versions of 'a')
This is not desired since 'b' might have made changes to 'a`' which can now
result in merge conflicts. We can avoid these merge conflicts since we know
that 'a``' is an older version of 'a`', so we don't even need to put it on top
of 'b'. Rebaseskipobsolete allows us to do exactly that.
Another undesired effect of a pure rebase is that now 'a`' and 'a``' are both
successors to 'a' which is a divergence. We don't want that and not rebasing
'a' the second time allows to avoid it.
This was not enabled by default initially because we wanted to have some more
experience with it. After months of painless usages in multiple places, we are
confident enough to turn it on my default.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import copy
import os
import silenttestrunner
import tempfile
import types
import unittest
from mercurial import (
error,
lock,
scmutil,
)
testlockname = 'testlock'
# work around http://bugs.python.org/issue1515
if types.MethodType not in copy._deepcopy_dispatch:
def _deepcopy_method(x, memo):
return type(x)(x.im_func, copy.deepcopy(x.im_self, memo), x.im_class)
copy._deepcopy_dispatch[types.MethodType] = _deepcopy_method
class lockwrapper(lock.lock):
def __init__(self, pidoffset, *args, **kwargs):
# lock.lock.__init__() calls lock(), so the pidoffset assignment needs
# to be earlier
self._pidoffset = pidoffset
super(lockwrapper, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
def _getpid(self):
return super(lockwrapper, self)._getpid() + self._pidoffset
class teststate(object):
def __init__(self, testcase, dir, pidoffset=0):
self._testcase = testcase
self._acquirecalled = False
self._releasecalled = False
self._postreleasecalled = False
self.vfs = scmutil.vfs(dir, audit=False)
self._pidoffset = pidoffset
def makelock(self, *args, **kwargs):
l = lockwrapper(self._pidoffset, self.vfs, testlockname,
releasefn=self.releasefn, acquirefn=self.acquirefn,
*args, **kwargs)
l.postrelease.append(self.postreleasefn)
return l
def acquirefn(self):
self._acquirecalled = True
def releasefn(self):
self._releasecalled = True
def postreleasefn(self):
self._postreleasecalled = True
def assertacquirecalled(self, called):
self._testcase.assertEqual(
self._acquirecalled, called,
'expected acquire to be %s but was actually %s' % (
self._tocalled(called),
self._tocalled(self._acquirecalled),
))
def resetacquirefn(self):
self._acquirecalled = False
def assertreleasecalled(self, called):
self._testcase.assertEqual(
self._releasecalled, called,
'expected release to be %s but was actually %s' % (
self._tocalled(called),
self._tocalled(self._releasecalled),
))
def assertpostreleasecalled(self, called):
self._testcase.assertEqual(
self._postreleasecalled, called,
'expected postrelease to be %s but was actually %s' % (
self._tocalled(called),
self._tocalled(self._postreleasecalled),
))
def assertlockexists(self, exists):
actual = self.vfs.lexists(testlockname)
self._testcase.assertEqual(
actual, exists,
'expected lock to %s but actually did %s' % (
self._toexists(exists),
self._toexists(actual),
))
def _tocalled(self, called):
if called:
return 'called'
else:
return 'not called'
def _toexists(self, exists):
if exists:
return 'exist'
else:
return 'not exist'
class testlock(unittest.TestCase):
def testlock(self):
state = teststate(self, tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=os.getcwd()))
lock = state.makelock()
state.assertacquirecalled(True)
lock.release()
state.assertreleasecalled(True)
state.assertpostreleasecalled(True)
state.assertlockexists(False)
def testrecursivelock(self):
state = teststate(self, tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=os.getcwd()))
lock = state.makelock()
state.assertacquirecalled(True)
state.resetacquirefn()
lock.lock()
# recursive lock should not call acquirefn again
state.assertacquirecalled(False)
lock.release() # brings lock refcount down from 2 to 1
state.assertreleasecalled(False)
state.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
state.assertlockexists(True)
lock.release() # releases the lock
state.assertreleasecalled(True)
state.assertpostreleasecalled(True)
state.assertlockexists(False)
def testlockfork(self):
state = teststate(self, tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=os.getcwd()))
lock = state.makelock()
state.assertacquirecalled(True)
# fake a fork
forklock = copy.deepcopy(lock)
forklock._pidoffset = 1
forklock.release()
state.assertreleasecalled(False)
state.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
state.assertlockexists(True)
# release the actual lock
lock.release()
state.assertreleasecalled(True)
state.assertpostreleasecalled(True)
state.assertlockexists(False)
def testinheritlock(self):
d = tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=os.getcwd())
parentstate = teststate(self, d)
parentlock = parentstate.makelock()
parentstate.assertacquirecalled(True)
# set up lock inheritance
with parentlock.inherit() as lockname:
parentstate.assertreleasecalled(True)
parentstate.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
parentstate.assertlockexists(True)
childstate = teststate(self, d, pidoffset=1)
childlock = childstate.makelock(parentlock=lockname)
childstate.assertacquirecalled(True)
childlock.release()
childstate.assertreleasecalled(True)
childstate.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
childstate.assertlockexists(True)
parentstate.resetacquirefn()
parentstate.assertacquirecalled(True)
parentlock.release()
parentstate.assertreleasecalled(True)
parentstate.assertpostreleasecalled(True)
parentstate.assertlockexists(False)
def testmultilock(self):
d = tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=os.getcwd())
state0 = teststate(self, d)
lock0 = state0.makelock()
state0.assertacquirecalled(True)
with lock0.inherit() as lock0name:
state0.assertreleasecalled(True)
state0.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
state0.assertlockexists(True)
state1 = teststate(self, d, pidoffset=1)
lock1 = state1.makelock(parentlock=lock0name)
state1.assertacquirecalled(True)
# from within lock1, acquire another lock
with lock1.inherit() as lock1name:
# since the file on disk is lock0's this should have the same
# name
self.assertEqual(lock0name, lock1name)
state2 = teststate(self, d, pidoffset=2)
lock2 = state2.makelock(parentlock=lock1name)
state2.assertacquirecalled(True)
lock2.release()
state2.assertreleasecalled(True)
state2.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
state2.assertlockexists(True)
state1.resetacquirefn()
state1.assertacquirecalled(True)
lock1.release()
state1.assertreleasecalled(True)
state1.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
state1.assertlockexists(True)
lock0.release()
def testinheritlockfork(self):
d = tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=os.getcwd())
parentstate = teststate(self, d)
parentlock = parentstate.makelock()
parentstate.assertacquirecalled(True)
# set up lock inheritance
with parentlock.inherit() as lockname:
childstate = teststate(self, d, pidoffset=1)
childlock = childstate.makelock(parentlock=lockname)
childstate.assertacquirecalled(True)
# fork the child lock
forkchildlock = copy.deepcopy(childlock)
forkchildlock._pidoffset += 1
forkchildlock.release()
childstate.assertreleasecalled(False)
childstate.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
childstate.assertlockexists(True)
# release the child lock
childlock.release()
childstate.assertreleasecalled(True)
childstate.assertpostreleasecalled(False)
childstate.assertlockexists(True)
parentlock.release()
def testinheritcheck(self):
d = tempfile.mkdtemp(dir=os.getcwd())
state = teststate(self, d)
def check():
raise error.LockInheritanceContractViolation('check failed')
lock = state.makelock(inheritchecker=check)
state.assertacquirecalled(True)
def tryinherit():
with lock.inherit():
pass
self.assertRaises(error.LockInheritanceContractViolation, tryinherit)
lock.release()
if __name__ == '__main__':
silenttestrunner.main(__name__)