Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-strict.t @ 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 | 7109d5ddeb0c |
children | 5199c5b6fd29 |
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$ hg init $ echo a > a $ hg ci -Ama adding a $ hg an a 0: a $ hg --config ui.strict=False an a 0: a $ echo "[ui]" >> $HGRCPATH $ echo "strict=True" >> $HGRCPATH $ hg an a hg: unknown command 'an' Mercurial Distributed SCM basic commands: add add the specified files on the next commit annotate show changeset information by line for each file clone make a copy of an existing repository commit commit the specified files or all outstanding changes diff diff repository (or selected files) export dump the header and diffs for one or more changesets forget forget the specified files on the next commit init create a new repository in the given directory log show revision history of entire repository or files merge merge another revision into working directory pull pull changes from the specified source push push changes to the specified destination remove remove the specified files on the next commit serve start stand-alone webserver status show changed files in the working directory summary summarize working directory state update update working directory (or switch revisions) (use 'hg help' for the full list of commands or 'hg -v' for details) [255] $ hg annotate a 0: a should succeed - up is an alias, not an abbreviation $ hg up 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved