view contrib/genosxversion.py @ 44477:ad718271a9eb

git: skeleton of a new extension to _directly_ operate on git repos This is based in part of work I did years ago in hgit, but it's mostly new code since I'm using pygit2 instead of dulwich and the hg storage interfaces have improved. Some cleanup of old hgit code by Pulkit, which I greatly appreciate. test-git-interop.t does not cover a whole lot of cases, but it passes. It includes status, diff, making a new commit, and `hg annotate` working on the git repository. This is _not_ (yet) production quality code: this is an experiment. Known technical debt lurking in this implementation: * Writing bookmarks just totally ignores transactions. * The way progress is threaded down into the gitstore is awful. * Ideally we'd find a way to incrementally reindex DAGs. I'm not sure how to do that efficiently, so we might need a "known only fast-forwards" mode on the DAG indexer for use on `hg commit` and friends. * We don't even _try_ to do anything reasonable for `hg pull` or `hg push`. * Mercurial need an interface for the changelog type. Tests currently require git 2.24 as far as I'm aware: `git status` has some changed output that I didn't try and handle in a compatible way. This patch has produced some interesting cleanups, most recently on the manifest type. I expect continuing down this road will produce other meritorious cleanups throughout our code. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6734
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
date Tue, 11 Feb 2020 00:44:59 -0500
parents 2372284d9457
children 148d177a4f2d
line wrap: on
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#!/usr/bin/env python2
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import argparse
import os
import subprocess
import sys

# Always load hg libraries from the hg we can find on $PATH.
hglib = subprocess.check_output(['hg', 'debuginstall', '-T', '{hgmodules}'])
sys.path.insert(0, os.path.dirname(hglib))

from mercurial import util

ap = argparse.ArgumentParser()
ap.add_argument(
    '--paranoid',
    action='store_true',
    help=(
        "Be paranoid about how version numbers compare and "
        "produce something that's more likely to sort "
        "reasonably."
    ),
)
ap.add_argument('--selftest', action='store_true', help='Run self-tests.')
ap.add_argument('versionfile', help='Path to a valid mercurial __version__.py')


def paranoidver(ver):
    """Given an hg version produce something that distutils can sort.

    Some Mac package management systems use distutils code in order to
    figure out upgrades, which makes life difficult. The test case is
    a reduced version of code in the Munki tool used by some large
    organizations to centrally manage OS X packages, which is what
    inspired this kludge.

    >>> paranoidver('3.4')
    '3.4.0'
    >>> paranoidver('3.4.2')
    '3.4.2'
    >>> paranoidver('3.0-rc+10')
    '2.9.9999-rc+10'
    >>> paranoidver('4.2+483-5d44d7d4076e')
    '4.2.0+483-5d44d7d4076e'
    >>> paranoidver('4.2.1+598-48d1e1214d8c')
    '4.2.1+598-48d1e1214d8c'
    >>> paranoidver('4.3-rc')
    '4.2.9999-rc'
    >>> paranoidver('4.3')
    '4.3.0'
    >>> from distutils import version
    >>> class LossyPaddedVersion(version.LooseVersion):
    ...     '''Subclass version.LooseVersion to compare things like
    ...     "10.6" and "10.6.0" as equal'''
    ...     def __init__(self, s):
    ...             self.parse(s)
    ...
    ...     def _pad(self, version_list, max_length):
    ...         'Pad a version list by adding extra 0 components to the end'
    ...         # copy the version_list so we don't modify it
    ...         cmp_list = list(version_list)
    ...         while len(cmp_list) < max_length:
    ...             cmp_list.append(0)
    ...         return cmp_list
    ...
    ...     def __cmp__(self, other):
    ...         if isinstance(other, str):
    ...             other = MunkiLooseVersion(other)
    ...         max_length = max(len(self.version), len(other.version))
    ...         self_cmp_version = self._pad(self.version, max_length)
    ...         other_cmp_version = self._pad(other.version, max_length)
    ...         return cmp(self_cmp_version, other_cmp_version)
    >>> def testver(older, newer):
    ...   o = LossyPaddedVersion(paranoidver(older))
    ...   n = LossyPaddedVersion(paranoidver(newer))
    ...   return o < n
    >>> testver('3.4', '3.5')
    True
    >>> testver('3.4.0', '3.5-rc')
    True
    >>> testver('3.4-rc', '3.5')
    True
    >>> testver('3.4-rc+10-deadbeef', '3.5')
    True
    >>> testver('3.4.2', '3.5-rc')
    True
    >>> testver('3.4.2', '3.5-rc+10-deadbeef')
    True
    >>> testver('4.2+483-5d44d7d4076e', '4.2.1+598-48d1e1214d8c')
    True
    >>> testver('4.3-rc', '4.3')
    True
    >>> testver('4.3', '4.3-rc')
    False
    """
    major, minor, micro, extra = util.versiontuple(ver, n=4)
    if micro is None:
        micro = 0
    if extra:
        if extra.startswith('rc'):
            if minor == 0:
                major -= 1
                minor = 9
            else:
                minor -= 1
            micro = 9999
            extra = '-' + extra
        else:
            extra = '+' + extra
    else:
        extra = ''
    return '%d.%d.%d%s' % (major, minor, micro, extra)


def main(argv):
    opts = ap.parse_args(argv[1:])
    if opts.selftest:
        import doctest

        doctest.testmod()
        return
    with open(opts.versionfile) as f:
        for l in f:
            if l.startswith('version = b'):
                # version number is entire line minus the quotes
                ver = l[len('version = b') + 1 : -2]
                break
    if opts.paranoid:
        print(paranoidver(ver))
    else:
        print(ver)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    main(sys.argv)