win32: spawndetached returns pid of detached process and not of cmd.exe
win32.spawndetached starts the detached process by `cmd.exe` (or COMSPEC). The
pid it returned was the one of cmd.exe and not the one of the detached process.
When this pid is used to kill the process, the detached process is not killed,
but only cmd.exe.
With this patch the pid of the detached process is written to the pid file.
Killing the process works as expected.
The pid is only evaluated on writing the pid file. It is unnecessary to search
the pid when it is not needed. And more important, it probably does not yet
exist right after the cmd.exe process was started. When the pid is written to
the file, waiting for the start of the detached process has already happened.
Use this functionality instead of writing a 2nd wait function.
Many tests on windows will not fail anymore, all those with the first failing
line "abort: child process failed to start". (The processes still hanging
around from previous test runs have to be killed first. They still block a
tcp port.)
A good test for the functionality of this patch is test-treediscovery.t,
because it starts and kills `hg serve -d` several times.
'''
Examples of useful python hooks for Mercurial.
'''
from mercurial import patch, util
def diffstat(ui, repo, **kwargs):
'''Example usage:
[hooks]
commit.diffstat = python:/path/to/this/file.py:diffstat
changegroup.diffstat = python:/path/to/this/file.py:diffstat
'''
if kwargs.get('parent2'):
return
node = kwargs['node']
first = repo[node].p1().node()
if 'url' in kwargs:
last = repo['tip'].node()
else:
last = node
diff = patch.diff(repo, first, last)
ui.write(patch.diffstat(util.iterlines(diff)))