Mercurial > hg
view tests/pdiff @ 38336:bb7e3c6ef592
phabricator: preserve the phase when amending in the Differential fields
I have no idea if it's better to change scmutil.cleanupnodes() so that it has
the option to either apply a specific phase (e.g. for various --secret switches)
or carry over the phase of the old node. The benefit would be that the caller
doesn't have to remember to do this. The con is maybe inefficiency? I wrote
this up as issue5918. I'm leaving that open since Yuya flagged it as an API
bug.
Since most other callers already do this, it's the simplest fix. (It's not
obvious that `split`, `fix` and `rebase` are doing this, but there is test
coverage for `fix` and `rebase`, and experimenting with `split` shows it does
the right thing.)
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 14 Jun 2018 12:35:04 -0400 |
parents | a2b55ee62803 |
children |
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#!/bin/sh # Script to get stable diff output on any platform. # # Output of this script is almost equivalent to GNU diff with "-Nru". # # Use this script as "hg pdiff" via extdiff extension with preparation # below in test scripts: # # $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF # > [extdiff] # > pdiff = sh "$RUNTESTDIR/pdiff" # > EOF filediff(){ # USAGE: filediff file1 file2 [header] # compare with /dev/null if file doesn't exist (as "-N" option) file1="$1" if test ! -f "$file1"; then file1=/dev/null fi file2="$2" if test ! -f "$file2"; then file2=/dev/null fi if cmp -s "$file1" "$file2" 2> /dev/null; then # Return immediately, because comparison isn't needed. This # also avoids redundant message of diff like "No differences # encountered" (on Solaris) return fi if test -n "$3"; then # show header only in recursive case echo "$3" fi # replace "/dev/null" by corresponded filename (as "-N" option) diff -u "$file1" "$file2" | sed "s@^--- /dev/null\(.*\)\$@--- $1\1@" | sed "s@^\+\+\+ /dev/null\(.*\)\$@+++ $2\1@" # in this case, files differ from each other return 1 } if test -d "$1" -o -d "$2"; then # ensure comparison in dictionary order ( if test -d "$1"; then (cd "$1" && find . -type f); fi if test -d "$2"; then (cd "$2" && find . -type f); fi ) | sed 's@^\./@@g' | sort | uniq | while read file; do filediff "$1/$file" "$2/$file" "diff -Nru $1/$file $2/$file" done # TODO: there is no portable way for current while-read based # implementation to return 1 at detecting changes. # # On bash and dash, assignment to variable inside while-block # doesn't affect outside, because inside while-block is executed # in sub-shell. BTW, it affects outside while-block on ksh (as sh # on Solaris). else filediff "$1" "$2" fi