py: error out if a "skip" character was given with non-dict to util.dirs()
util.dirs() keeps track of the directories in its input collection. If
a "skip" character is given to it, it will assume the input is a
dirstate map and it will skip entries that are in the given "skip"
state. I think this is used only for skipping removed entries ("r") in
the dirtate. The C implementation of util.dirs() errors out if it was
given a skip character and a non-dict was passed. The pure
implementation simply ignored the request skip state. Let's make it
easier to discover bugs here by erroring out in the pure
implementation too. Let's also switch to checking for the dict-ness,
to make the C implementation (since that's clearly been sufficient for
many years). This last change makes test-
issue660.t pass on py3 in
pure mode, since the old check was for existence of iteritems(), which
doesn't exist on py3.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6669
# reproduce issue2264, issue2516
create test repo
$ cat <<EOF >> $HGRCPATH
> [extensions]
> transplant =
> EOF
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ template="{rev} {desc|firstline} [{branch}]\n"
# we need to start out with two changesets on the default branch
# in order to avoid the cute little optimization where transplant
# pulls rather than transplants
add initial changesets
$ echo feature1 > file1
$ hg ci -Am"feature 1"
adding file1
$ echo feature2 >> file2
$ hg ci -Am"feature 2"
adding file2
# The changes to 'bugfix' are enough to show the bug: in fact, with only
# those changes, it's a very noisy crash ("RuntimeError: nothing
# committed after transplant"). But if we modify a second file in the
# transplanted changesets, the bug is much more subtle: transplant
# silently drops the second change to 'bugfix' on the floor, and we only
# see it when we run 'hg status' after transplanting. Subtle data loss
# bugs are worse than crashes, so reproduce the subtle case here.
commit bug fixes on bug fix branch
$ hg branch fixes
marked working directory as branch fixes
(branches are permanent and global, did you want a bookmark?)
$ echo fix1 > bugfix
$ echo fix1 >> file1
$ hg ci -Am"fix 1"
adding bugfix
$ echo fix2 > bugfix
$ echo fix2 >> file1
$ hg ci -Am"fix 2"
$ hg log -G --template="$template"
@ 3 fix 2 [fixes]
|
o 2 fix 1 [fixes]
|
o 1 feature 2 [default]
|
o 0 feature 1 [default]
transplant bug fixes onto release branch
$ hg update 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 2 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg branch release
marked working directory as branch release
$ hg transplant 2 3
applying [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
[0-9a-f]{12} transplanted to [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
applying [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
[0-9a-f]{12} transplanted to [0-9a-f]{12} (re)
$ hg log -G --template="$template"
@ 5 fix 2 [release]
|
o 4 fix 1 [release]
|
| o 3 fix 2 [fixes]
| |
| o 2 fix 1 [fixes]
| |
| o 1 feature 2 [default]
|/
o 0 feature 1 [default]
$ hg status
$ hg status --rev 0:4
M file1
A bugfix
$ hg status --rev 4:5
M bugfix
M file1
now test that we fixed the bug for all scripts/extensions
$ cat > $TESTTMP/committwice.py <<__EOF__
> import time
> from mercurial import hg, match, node, ui as uimod
>
> def replacebyte(fn, b):
> f = open(fn, "rb+")
> f.seek(0, 0)
> f.write(b)
> f.close()
>
> def printfiles(repo, rev):
> repo.ui.status(b"revision %d files: [%s]\n"
> % (rev, b', '.join(b"'%s'" % f
> for f in repo[rev].files())))
>
> repo = hg.repository(uimod.ui.load(), b'.')
> assert len(repo) == 6, "initial: len(repo): %d, expected: 6" % len(repo)
>
> replacebyte(b"bugfix", b"u")
> time.sleep(2)
> try:
> repo.ui.status(b"PRE: len(repo): %d\n" % len(repo))
> wlock = repo.wlock()
> lock = repo.lock()
> replacebyte(b"file1", b"x")
> repo.commit(text=b"x", user=b"test", date=(0, 0))
> replacebyte(b"file1", b"y")
> repo.commit(text=b"y", user=b"test", date=(0, 0))
> repo.ui.status(b"POST: len(repo): %d\n" % len(repo))
> finally:
> lock.release()
> wlock.release()
> printfiles(repo, 6)
> printfiles(repo, 7)
> __EOF__
$ "$PYTHON" $TESTTMP/committwice.py
PRE: len(repo): 6
POST: len(repo): 8
revision 6 files: ['bugfix', 'file1']
revision 7 files: ['file1']
Do a size-preserving modification outside of that process
$ echo abcd > bugfix
$ hg status
M bugfix
$ hg log --template "{rev} {desc} {files}\n" -r5:
5 fix 2 bugfix file1
6 x bugfix file1
7 y file1
$ cd ..