Mercurial > hg
view contrib/dumprevlog @ 45830:c102b704edb5
global: use python3 in shebangs
Python 3 is the future. We want Python scripts to be using Python 3
by default.
This change updates all `#!/usr/bin/env python` shebangs to use
`python3`.
Does this mean all scripts use or require Python 3: no.
In the test environment, the `PATH` environment variable in tests is
updated to guarantee that the Python executable used to run
run-tests.py is used. Since test scripts all now use
`#!/usr/bin/env python3`, we had to update this code to install
a `python3` symlink instead of `python`.
It is possible there are some random scripts now executed with the
incorrect Python interpreter in some contexts. However, I would argue
that this was a pre-existing bug: we should almost always be executing
new Python processes using the `sys.executable` from the originating
Python script, as `python` or `python3` won't guarantee we'll use the
same interpreter.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D9273
author | Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 06 Nov 2020 13:58:59 -0800 |
parents | 4c1b4805db57 |
children | 59fa3890d40a |
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#!/usr/bin/env python3 # Dump revlogs as raw data stream # $ find .hg/store/ -name "*.i" | xargs dumprevlog > repo.dump from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import sys from mercurial import ( encoding, node, pycompat, revlog, ) from mercurial.utils import procutil for fp in (sys.stdin, sys.stdout, sys.stderr): procutil.setbinary(fp) def binopen(path, mode=b'rb'): if b'b' not in mode: mode = mode + b'b' return open(path, pycompat.sysstr(mode)) binopen.options = {} def printb(data, end=b'\n'): sys.stdout.flush() procutil.stdout.write(data + end) for f in sys.argv[1:]: r = revlog.revlog(binopen, encoding.strtolocal(f)) print("file:", f) for i in r: n = r.node(i) p = r.parents(n) d = r.revision(n) printb(b"node: %s" % node.hex(n)) printb(b"linkrev: %d" % r.linkrev(i)) printb(b"parents: %s %s" % (node.hex(p[0]), node.hex(p[1]))) printb(b"length: %d" % len(d)) printb(b"-start-") printb(d) printb(b"-end-")