mercurial/pushkey.py
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
Wed, 12 Sep 2018 23:10:59 -0400
changeset 39593 c8514f858788
parent 25969 7b200566e474
child 43075 57875cf423c9
permissions -rw-r--r--
tests: stabilize change for handling not quoting non-empty-directory The change originated in cb1329738d64. I suspect the problem is with the combination of (re) and the '\' to '/' retry on Windows. I've no idea if py3 on Windows needs the quoting, since it can't even run `hg` with no arguments. (It's dying somewhere on the ctype declarations when win32.py is imported.)

# pushkey.py - dispatching for pushing and pulling keys
#
# Copyright 2010 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.

from __future__ import absolute_import

from . import (
    bookmarks,
    encoding,
    obsolete,
    phases,
)

def _nslist(repo):
    n = {}
    for k in _namespaces:
        n[k] = ""
    if not obsolete.isenabled(repo, obsolete.exchangeopt):
        n.pop('obsolete')
    return n

_namespaces = {"namespaces": (lambda *x: False, _nslist),
               "bookmarks": (bookmarks.pushbookmark, bookmarks.listbookmarks),
               "phases": (phases.pushphase, phases.listphases),
               "obsolete": (obsolete.pushmarker, obsolete.listmarkers),
              }

def register(namespace, pushkey, listkeys):
    _namespaces[namespace] = (pushkey, listkeys)

def _get(namespace):
    return _namespaces.get(namespace, (lambda *x: False, lambda *x: {}))

def push(repo, namespace, key, old, new):
    '''should succeed iff value was old'''
    pk = _get(namespace)[0]
    return pk(repo, key, old, new)

def list(repo, namespace):
    '''return a dict'''
    lk = _get(namespace)[1]
    return lk(repo)

encode = encoding.fromlocal

decode = encoding.tolocal

def encodekeys(keys):
    """encode the content of a pushkey namespace for exchange over the wire"""
    return '\n'.join(['%s\t%s' % (encode(k), encode(v)) for k, v in keys])

def decodekeys(data):
    """decode the content of a pushkey namespace from exchange over the wire"""
    result = {}
    for l in data.splitlines():
        k, v = l.split('\t')
        result[decode(k)] = decode(v)
    return result