Mercurial > hg
view tests/autodiff.py @ 42920:a50661567f83
uncommit: drop the hyphen from --current-user and --current-date
I didn't pay enough attention to these long forms- graft, amend and MQ already
use the old style naming. It's probably more important to be consistent than
modern. The hypenated style came from evolve.
Yuya mentioned this naming discrepancy in 4145fd3569c3, but it didn't attract
any discussion[1]. There's also a bit of inconsistency in that the default
parameter for `currentdate` is `False` for graft, and `None` for the rest.
[1] https://www.mercurial-scm.org/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2019-January/126767.html
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6841
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 10 Sep 2019 22:04:22 -0400 |
parents | cdccfe20eed7 |
children | 2372284d9457 |
line wrap: on
line source
# Extension dedicated to test patch.diff() upgrade modes from __future__ import absolute_import from mercurial import ( error, patch, pycompat, registrar, scmutil, ) cmdtable = {} command = registrar.command(cmdtable) @command(b'autodiff', [(b'', b'git', b'', b'git upgrade mode (yes/no/auto/warn/abort)')], b'[OPTION]... [FILE]...') def autodiff(ui, repo, *pats, **opts): opts = pycompat.byteskwargs(opts) diffopts = patch.difffeatureopts(ui, opts) git = opts.get(b'git', b'no') brokenfiles = set() losedatafn = None if git in (b'yes', b'no'): diffopts.git = git == b'yes' diffopts.upgrade = False elif git == b'auto': diffopts.git = False diffopts.upgrade = True elif git == b'warn': diffopts.git = False diffopts.upgrade = True def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs): brokenfiles.add(fn) return True elif git == b'abort': diffopts.git = False diffopts.upgrade = True def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs): raise error.Abort(b'losing data for %s' % fn) else: raise error.Abort(b'--git must be yes, no or auto') ctx1, ctx2 = scmutil.revpair(repo, []) m = scmutil.match(ctx2, pats, opts) it = patch.diff(repo, ctx1.node(), ctx2.node(), match=m, opts=diffopts, losedatafn=losedatafn) for chunk in it: ui.write(chunk) for fn in sorted(brokenfiles): ui.write((b'data lost for: %s\n' % fn))