view .jshintrc @ 46634:ad30b29bc23d

copies: choose target directory based on longest match If one side of a merge renames `dir1/` to `dir2/` and the subdirectory `dir1/subdir1/` to `dir2/subdir2/`, and the other side of the merge adds a file in `dir1/subdir1/`, we should clearly move that into `dir2/subdir2/`. We already detect the directories correctly before this patch, but we iterate over them in arbitrary order. That results in the new file sometimes ending up in `dir2/subdir1/` instead. This patch fixes it by iterating over the source directories by visiting subdirectories first. That's achieved by simply iterating over them in reverse lexicographical order. Without the fix, the test case still passes on Python 2 but fails on Python 3. It depends on the iteration order of the dict. I did not look into how it's built up and why it behaved differently before the fix. I could probably have gotten it to fail on Python 2 as well by choosing different directory names. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10115
author Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com>
date Thu, 04 Mar 2021 16:06:55 -0800
parents bdd2e18b54c5
children
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{
    // Enforcing
    "eqeqeq"        : true,     // true: Require triple equals (===) for comparison
    "forin"         : true,     // true: Require filtering for..in loops with obj.hasOwnProperty()
    "freeze"        : true,     // true: prohibits overwriting prototypes of native objects such as Array, Date etc.
    "nonbsp"        : true,     // true: Prohibit "non-breaking whitespace" characters.
    "undef"         : true,     // true: Require all non-global variables to be declared (prevents global leaks)

    // Environments
    "browser"       : true      // Web Browser (window, document, etc)
}