view tests/test-status.t @ 24790:baa11dde8c0e

match: add a subclass for dirstate normalizing of the matched patterns This class is only needed on case insensitive filesystems, and only for wdir context matches. It allows the user to not match the case of the items in the filesystem- especially for naming directories, which dirstate doesn't handle[1]. Making dirstate handle mismatched directory cases is too expensive[2]. Since dirstate doesn't apply to committed csets, this is only created by overriding basectx.match() in workingctx, and only on icasefs. The default arguments have been dropped, because the ctx must be passed to the matcher in order to function. For operations that can apply to both wdir and some other context, this ends up normalizing the filename to the case as it exists in the filesystem, and using that case for the lookup in the other context. See the diff example in the test. Previously, given a directory with an inexact case: - add worked as expected - diff, forget and status would silently ignore the request - files would exit with 1 - commit, revert and remove would fail (even when the commands leading up to them worked): $ hg ci -m "AbCDef" capsdir1/capsdir abort: CapsDir1/CapsDir: no match under directory! $ hg revert -r '.^' capsdir1/capsdir capsdir1\capsdir: no such file in rev 64dae27060b7 $ hg remove capsdir1/capsdir not removing capsdir1\capsdir: no tracked files [1] Globs are normalized, so that the -I and -X don't need to be specified with a case match. Without that, the second last remove (with -X) removes the files, leaving nothing for the last remove. However, specifying the files as 'glob:**.Txt' does not work. Perhaps this requires 're.IGNORECASE'? There are only a handful of places that create matchers directly, instead of being routed through the context.match() method. Some may benefit from changing over to using ctx.match() as a factory function: revset.checkstatus() revset.contains() revset.filelog() revset._matchfiles() localrepository._loadfilter() ignore.ignore() fileset.subrepo() filemerge._picktool() overrides.addlargefiles() lfcommands.lfconvert() kwtemplate.__init__() eolfile.__init__() eolfile.checkrev() acl.buildmatch() Currently, a toplevel subrepo can be named with an inexact case. However, the path auditor gets in the way of naming _anything_ in the subrepo if the top level case doesn't match. That is trickier to handle, because there's the user provided case, the case in the filesystem, and the case stored in .hgsub. This can be fixed next cycle. --- a/tests/test-subrepo-deep-nested-change.t +++ b/tests/test-subrepo-deep-nested-change.t @@ -170,8 +170,15 @@ R sub1/sub2/test.txt $ hg update -Cq $ touch sub1/sub2/folder/bar +#if icasefs + $ hg addremove Sub1/sub2 + abort: path 'Sub1\sub2' is inside nested repo 'Sub1' + [255] + $ hg -q addremove sub1/sub2 +#else $ hg addremove sub1/sub2 adding sub1/sub2/folder/bar (glob) +#endif $ hg status -S A sub1/sub2/folder/bar ? foo/bar/abc The narrowmatcher class may need to be tweaked when that is fixed. [1] http://www.selenic.com/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2015-April/068183.html [2] http://www.selenic.com/pipermail/mercurial-devel/2015-April/068191.html
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sun, 12 Apr 2015 01:39:21 -0400
parents 7d01371e6358
children e8075329c5fb
line wrap: on
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  $ hg init repo1
  $ cd repo1
  $ mkdir a b a/1 b/1 b/2
  $ touch in_root a/in_a b/in_b a/1/in_a_1 b/1/in_b_1 b/2/in_b_2

hg status in repo root:

  $ hg status
  ? a/1/in_a_1
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/1/in_b_1
  ? b/2/in_b_2
  ? b/in_b
  ? in_root

hg status . in repo root:

  $ hg status .
  ? a/1/in_a_1
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/1/in_b_1
  ? b/2/in_b_2
  ? b/in_b
  ? in_root

  $ hg status --cwd a
  ? a/1/in_a_1
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/1/in_b_1
  ? b/2/in_b_2
  ? b/in_b
  ? in_root
  $ hg status --cwd a .
  ? 1/in_a_1
  ? in_a
  $ hg status --cwd a ..
  ? 1/in_a_1
  ? in_a
  ? ../b/1/in_b_1
  ? ../b/2/in_b_2
  ? ../b/in_b
  ? ../in_root

  $ hg status --cwd b
  ? a/1/in_a_1
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/1/in_b_1
  ? b/2/in_b_2
  ? b/in_b
  ? in_root
  $ hg status --cwd b .
  ? 1/in_b_1
  ? 2/in_b_2
  ? in_b
  $ hg status --cwd b ..
  ? ../a/1/in_a_1
  ? ../a/in_a
  ? 1/in_b_1
  ? 2/in_b_2
  ? in_b
  ? ../in_root

  $ hg status --cwd a/1
  ? a/1/in_a_1
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/1/in_b_1
  ? b/2/in_b_2
  ? b/in_b
  ? in_root
  $ hg status --cwd a/1 .
  ? in_a_1
  $ hg status --cwd a/1 ..
  ? in_a_1
  ? ../in_a

  $ hg status --cwd b/1
  ? a/1/in_a_1
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/1/in_b_1
  ? b/2/in_b_2
  ? b/in_b
  ? in_root
  $ hg status --cwd b/1 .
  ? in_b_1
  $ hg status --cwd b/1 ..
  ? in_b_1
  ? ../2/in_b_2
  ? ../in_b

  $ hg status --cwd b/2
  ? a/1/in_a_1
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/1/in_b_1
  ? b/2/in_b_2
  ? b/in_b
  ? in_root
  $ hg status --cwd b/2 .
  ? in_b_2
  $ hg status --cwd b/2 ..
  ? ../1/in_b_1
  ? in_b_2
  ? ../in_b

combining patterns with root and patterns without a root works

  $ hg st a/in_a re:.*b$
  ? a/in_a
  ? b/in_b

  $ cd ..

  $ hg init repo2
  $ cd repo2
  $ touch modified removed deleted ignored
  $ echo "^ignored$" > .hgignore
  $ hg ci -A -m 'initial checkin'
  adding .hgignore
  adding deleted
  adding modified
  adding removed
  $ touch modified added unknown ignored
  $ hg add added
  $ hg remove removed
  $ rm deleted

hg status:

  $ hg status
  A added
  R removed
  ! deleted
  ? unknown

hg status modified added removed deleted unknown never-existed ignored:

  $ hg status modified added removed deleted unknown never-existed ignored
  never-existed: * (glob)
  A added
  R removed
  ! deleted
  ? unknown

  $ hg copy modified copied

hg status -C:

  $ hg status -C
  A added
  A copied
    modified
  R removed
  ! deleted
  ? unknown

hg status -A:

  $ hg status -A
  A added
  A copied
    modified
  R removed
  ! deleted
  ? unknown
  I ignored
  C .hgignore
  C modified

  $ hg status -A -Tjson
  [
   {
    "path": "added",
    "status": "A"
   },
   {
    "copy": "modified",
    "path": "copied",
    "status": "A"
   },
   {
    "path": "removed",
    "status": "R"
   },
   {
    "path": "deleted",
    "status": "!"
   },
   {
    "path": "unknown",
    "status": "?"
   },
   {
    "path": "ignored",
    "status": "I"
   },
   {
    "path": ".hgignore",
    "status": "C"
   },
   {
    "path": "modified",
    "status": "C"
   }
  ]

  $ hg status -A -Tpickle > pickle
  >>> import pickle
  >>> print sorted((x['status'], x['path']) for x in pickle.load(open("pickle")))
  [('!', 'deleted'), ('?', 'pickle'), ('?', 'unknown'), ('A', 'added'), ('A', 'copied'), ('C', '.hgignore'), ('C', 'modified'), ('I', 'ignored'), ('R', 'removed')]
  $ rm pickle

  $ echo "^ignoreddir$" > .hgignore
  $ mkdir ignoreddir
  $ touch ignoreddir/file

hg status ignoreddir/file:

  $ hg status ignoreddir/file

hg status -i ignoreddir/file:

  $ hg status -i ignoreddir/file
  I ignoreddir/file
  $ cd ..

Check 'status -q' and some combinations

  $ hg init repo3
  $ cd repo3
  $ touch modified removed deleted ignored
  $ echo "^ignored$" > .hgignore
  $ hg commit -A -m 'initial checkin'
  adding .hgignore
  adding deleted
  adding modified
  adding removed
  $ touch added unknown ignored
  $ hg add added
  $ echo "test" >> modified
  $ hg remove removed
  $ rm deleted
  $ hg copy modified copied

Specify working directory revision explicitly, that should be the same as
"hg status"

  $ hg status --change "wdir()"
  M modified
  A added
  A copied
  R removed
  ! deleted
  ? unknown

Run status with 2 different flags.
Check if result is the same or different.
If result is not as expected, raise error

  $ assert() {
  >     hg status $1 > ../a
  >     hg status $2 > ../b
  >     if diff ../a ../b > /dev/null; then
  >         out=0
  >     else
  >         out=1
  >     fi
  >     if [ $3 -eq 0 ]; then
  >         df="same"
  >     else
  >         df="different"
  >     fi
  >     if [ $out -ne $3 ]; then
  >         echo "Error on $1 and $2, should be $df."
  >     fi
  > }

Assert flag1 flag2 [0-same | 1-different]

  $ assert "-q" "-mard"      0
  $ assert "-A" "-marduicC"  0
  $ assert "-qA" "-mardcC"   0
  $ assert "-qAui" "-A"      0
  $ assert "-qAu" "-marducC" 0
  $ assert "-qAi" "-mardicC" 0
  $ assert "-qu" "-u"        0
  $ assert "-q" "-u"         1
  $ assert "-m" "-a"         1
  $ assert "-r" "-d"         1
  $ cd ..

  $ hg init repo4
  $ cd repo4
  $ touch modified removed deleted
  $ hg ci -q -A -m 'initial checkin'
  $ touch added unknown
  $ hg add added
  $ hg remove removed
  $ rm deleted
  $ echo x > modified
  $ hg copy modified copied
  $ hg ci -m 'test checkin' -d "1000001 0"
  $ rm *
  $ touch unrelated
  $ hg ci -q -A -m 'unrelated checkin' -d "1000002 0"

hg status --change 1:

  $ hg status --change 1
  M modified
  A added
  A copied
  R removed

hg status --change 1 unrelated:

  $ hg status --change 1 unrelated

hg status -C --change 1 added modified copied removed deleted:

  $ hg status -C --change 1 added modified copied removed deleted
  M modified
  A added
  A copied
    modified
  R removed

hg status -A --change 1 and revset:

  $ hg status -A --change '1|1'
  M modified
  A added
  A copied
    modified
  R removed
  C deleted

  $ cd ..

hg status of binary file starting with '\1\n', a separator for metadata:

  $ hg init repo5
  $ cd repo5
  >>> open("010a", "wb").write("\1\nfoo")
  $ hg ci -q -A -m 'initial checkin'
  $ hg status -A
  C 010a

  >>> open("010a", "wb").write("\1\nbar")
  $ hg status -A
  M 010a
  $ hg ci -q -m 'modify 010a'
  $ hg status -A --rev 0:1
  M 010a

  $ touch empty
  $ hg ci -q -A -m 'add another file'
  $ hg status -A --rev 1:2 010a
  C 010a

  $ cd ..

test "hg status" with "directory pattern" which matches against files
only known on target revision.

  $ hg init repo6
  $ cd repo6

  $ echo a > a.txt
  $ hg add a.txt
  $ hg commit -m '#0'
  $ mkdir -p 1/2/3/4/5
  $ echo b > 1/2/3/4/5/b.txt
  $ hg add 1/2/3/4/5/b.txt
  $ hg commit -m '#1'

  $ hg update -C 0 > /dev/null
  $ hg status -A
  C a.txt

the directory matching against specified pattern should be removed,
because directory existence prevents 'dirstate.walk()' from showing
warning message about such pattern.

  $ test ! -d 1
  $ hg status -A --rev 1 1/2/3/4/5/b.txt
  R 1/2/3/4/5/b.txt
  $ hg status -A --rev 1 1/2/3/4/5
  R 1/2/3/4/5/b.txt
  $ hg status -A --rev 1 1/2/3
  R 1/2/3/4/5/b.txt
  $ hg status -A --rev 1 1
  R 1/2/3/4/5/b.txt

  $ hg status --config ui.formatdebug=True --rev 1 1
  status = [
      {*'path': '1/2/3/4/5/b.txt'*}, (glob)
  ]

#if windows
  $ hg --config ui.slash=false status -A --rev 1 1
  R 1\2\3\4\5\b.txt
#endif

  $ cd ..

Status after move overwriting a file (issue4458)
=================================================


  $ hg init issue4458
  $ cd issue4458
  $ echo a > a
  $ echo b > b
  $ hg commit -Am base
  adding a
  adding b


with --force

  $ hg mv b --force a
  $ hg st --copies
  M a
    b
  R b
  $ hg revert --all
  reverting a
  undeleting b
  $ rm *.orig

without force

  $ hg rm a
  $ hg st --copies
  R a
  $ hg mv b a
  $ hg st --copies
  M a
    b
  R b

using ui.statuscopies setting
  $ hg st --config ui.statuscopies=true
  M a
    b
  R b
  $ hg st --config ui.statuscopies=false
  M a
  R b

Other "bug" highlight, the revision status does not report the copy information.
This is buggy behavior.

  $ hg commit -m 'blah'
  $ hg st --copies --change .
  M a
  R b

  $ cd ..