tests/test-merge-remove.t
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
Thu, 26 Sep 2024 18:15:36 -0400
changeset 51923 b455dfddfed0
parent 49621 55c6ebd11cb9
permissions -rw-r--r--
interfaces: convert the zope `Attribute` attrs to regular fields At this point, we should have a useful protocol class. The file syntax requires the type to be supplied for any fields that are declared, but we'll leave the complex ones partially unspecified for now, for simplicity. (Also, the things documented as `Callable` are really as future type annotating worked showed- roll with it for now, but they're marked as TODO for fixing later.) All of the fields and all of the attrs will need type annotations, or the type rules say they are considered to be `Any`. That can be done in a separate pass, possibly applying the `dirstate.pyi` file generated from the concrete class. The first cut of this turned the `interfaceutil.Attribute` fields into plain fields, and thus the types on them. PyCharm flagged a few things as having incompatible signatures when the concrete dirstate class subclassed this, when the concrete class has them declared as `@property`. So they've been changed to `@property` here in those cases. The remaining fields that are decorated in the concrete class have comments noting the differences. We'll see if they need to be changed going forward, but leave them for now. We'll be in trouble if the `@util.propertycache` is needed, because we can't import that module here at runtime, due to circular imports.

  $ hg init repo
  $ cd repo

  $ echo foo > foo
  $ echo bar > bar
  $ hg ci -qAm 'add foo bar'

  $ echo foo2 >> foo
  $ echo bleh > bar
  $ hg ci -m 'change foo bar'

  $ hg up -qC 0
  $ hg mv foo foo1
  $ echo foo1 > foo1
  $ hg cat foo >> foo1
  $ hg ci -m 'mv foo foo1'
  created new head

  $ hg merge
  merging foo1 and foo to foo1
  1 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (branch merge, don't forget to commit)

  $ hg debugstate --no-dates
  m   0         -2 unset               bar
  m   0         -2 unset               foo1
  copy: foo -> foo1

  $ hg st -q
  M bar
  M foo1


Removing foo1 and bar:

  $ cp foo1 F
  $ cp bar B
  $ hg rm -f foo1 bar

  $ hg debugstate --no-dates
  r   0         -1 set                 bar
  r   0         -1 set                 foo1
  copy: foo -> foo1

  $ hg st -qC
  R bar
  R foo1


Re-adding foo1 and bar:

  $ cp F foo1
  $ cp B bar
  $ hg add -v foo1 bar
  adding bar
  adding foo1

  $ hg debugstate --no-dates
  m   0         -2 unset               bar
  m   0         -2 unset               foo1
  copy: foo -> foo1

  $ hg st -qC
  M bar
  M foo1
    foo


Reverting foo1 and bar:

  $ hg revert -vr . foo1 bar
  saving current version of bar as bar.orig
  saving current version of foo1 as foo1.orig
  reverting bar
  reverting foo1

  $ hg debugstate --no-dates
  m   0         -2 unset               bar
  m   0         -2 unset               foo1
  copy: foo -> foo1

  $ hg st -qC
  M bar
  M foo1
    foo

  $ hg diff

Merge should not overwrite local file that is untracked after remove

  $ rm *
  $ hg up -qC
  $ hg rm bar
  $ hg ci -m 'remove bar'
  $ echo 'memories of buried pirate treasure' > bar
  $ hg merge
  bar: untracked file differs
  abort: untracked files in working directory differ from files in requested revision
  [20]
  $ cat bar
  memories of buried pirate treasure

Those who use force will lose

  $ hg merge -f
  file 'bar' was deleted in local [working copy] but was modified in other [merge rev].
  You can use (c)hanged version, leave (d)eleted, or leave (u)nresolved.
  What do you want to do? u
  merging foo1 and foo to foo1
  0 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 1 files unresolved
  use 'hg resolve' to retry unresolved file merges or 'hg merge --abort' to abandon
  [1]
  $ cat bar
  bleh
  $ hg st
  M bar
  M foo1