view tests/test-bookmarks-current.t @ 27246:b288fb2724bf

wireproto: config options to disable bundle1 bundle2 is the new and preferred wire protocol format. For various reasons, server operators may wish to force clients to use it. One reason is performance. If a repository is stored in generaldelta, the server must recompute deltas in order to produce the bundle1 changegroup. This can be extremely expensive. For mozilla-central, bundle generation typically takes a few minutes. However, generating a non-gd bundle from a generaldelta encoded mozilla-central requires over 30 minutes of CPU! If a large repository like mozilla-central were encoded in generaldelta and non-gd clients connected, they could easily flood a server by cloning. This patch gives server operators config knobs to control whether bundle1 is allowed for push and pull operations. The default is to support legacy bundle1 clients, making this patch backwards compatible.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Fri, 04 Dec 2015 15:12:11 -0800
parents 390a10b7843b
children 3f9e25a42e69
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  $ hg init

no bookmarks

  $ hg bookmarks
  no bookmarks set

set bookmark X

  $ hg bookmark X

list bookmarks

  $ hg bookmark
   * X                         -1:000000000000

list bookmarks with color

  $ hg --config extensions.color= --config color.mode=ansi \
  >     bookmark --color=always
  \x1b[0;32m * \x1b[0m\x1b[0;32mX\x1b[0m\x1b[0;32m                         -1:000000000000\x1b[0m (esc)

update to bookmark X

  $ hg update X
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (activating bookmark X)

list bookmarks

  $ hg bookmarks
   * X                         -1:000000000000

rename

  $ hg bookmark -m X Z

list bookmarks

  $ cat .hg/bookmarks.current
  Z (no-eol)
  $ cat .hg/bookmarks
  0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 Z
  $ hg bookmarks
   * Z                         -1:000000000000

new bookmarks X and Y, first one made active

  $ hg bookmark Y X

list bookmarks

  $ hg bookmark
     X                         -1:000000000000
   * Y                         -1:000000000000
     Z                         -1:000000000000

  $ hg bookmark -d X

commit

  $ echo 'b' > b
  $ hg add b
  $ hg commit -m'test'

list bookmarks

  $ hg bookmark
   * Y                         0:719295282060
     Z                         -1:000000000000

Verify that switching to Z updates the active bookmark:
  $ hg update Z
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (activating bookmark Z)
  $ hg bookmark
     Y                         0:719295282060
   * Z                         -1:000000000000

Switch back to Y for the remaining tests in this file:
  $ hg update Y
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (activating bookmark Y)

delete bookmarks

  $ hg bookmark -d Y
  $ hg bookmark -d Z

list bookmarks

  $ hg bookmark
  no bookmarks set

update to tip

  $ hg update tip
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved

set bookmark Y using -r . but make sure that the active
bookmark is not activated

  $ hg bookmark -r . Y

list bookmarks, Y should not be active

  $ hg bookmark
     Y                         0:719295282060

now, activate Y

  $ hg up -q Y

set bookmark Z using -i

  $ hg bookmark -r . -i Z
  $ hg bookmarks
   * Y                         0:719295282060
     Z                         0:719295282060

deactivate active bookmark using -i

  $ hg bookmark -i Y
  $ hg bookmarks
     Y                         0:719295282060
     Z                         0:719295282060

  $ hg up -q Y
  $ hg bookmark -i
  $ hg bookmarks
     Y                         0:719295282060
     Z                         0:719295282060
  $ hg bookmark -i
  no active bookmark
  $ hg up -q Y
  $ hg bookmarks
   * Y                         0:719295282060
     Z                         0:719295282060

deactivate active bookmark while renaming

  $ hg bookmark -i -m Y X
  $ hg bookmarks
     X                         0:719295282060
     Z                         0:719295282060

bare update moves the active bookmark forward and clear the divergent bookmarks

  $ echo a > a
  $ hg ci -Am1
  adding a
  $ echo b >> a
  $ hg ci -Am2
  $ hg bookmark X@1 -r 1
  $ hg bookmark X@2 -r 2
  $ hg update X
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (activating bookmark X)
  $ hg bookmarks
   * X                         0:719295282060
     X@1                       1:cc586d725fbe
     X@2                       2:49e1c4e84c58
     Z                         0:719295282060
  $ hg update
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  updating bookmark X
  $ hg bookmarks
   * X                         2:49e1c4e84c58
     Z                         0:719295282060

test deleting .hg/bookmarks.current when explicitly updating
to a revision

  $ echo a >> b
  $ hg ci -m.
  $ hg up -q X
  $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current

try to update to it again to make sure we don't
set and then unset it

  $ hg up -q X
  $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current

  $ hg up -q 1
  $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current
  [1]

when a bookmark is active, hg up -r . is
analogous to hg book -i <active bookmark>

  $ hg up -q X
  $ hg up -q .
  $ test -f .hg/bookmarks.current
  [1]

issue 4552 -- simulate a pull moving the active bookmark

  $ hg up -q X
  $ printf "Z" > .hg/bookmarks.current
  $ hg log -T '{activebookmark}\n' -r Z
  Z
  $ hg log -T '{bookmarks % "{active}\n"}' -r Z
  Z