relnotes: copy "next" to "5.1" and clear "next"
To avoid merge conflicts, we want to avoid modifying the file on
multiple branches in parallel. This patch is therefore meant to be
applied to the stable branch and then quickly be merged to default (at
least before edits are made to relnotes/next there).
Another option would have been to copy the file on the stable branch
and to clear it on the default branch. However, that still results in
conflicts if the copy is edited on the stable branch (Mercurial would
try to apply the changes from the default branch to it).
We could also delete the file in one commit and recreate it in another
commit. However, Mercurial is quite inconsistent in what it considers
a break in history (see test-copies-unrelated.t), so I'd like to avoid
that.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6705
#require reporevlogstore
A repo with unknown revlogv2 requirement string cannot be opened
$ hg init invalidreq
$ cd invalidreq
$ echo exp-revlogv2.unknown >> .hg/requires
$ hg log
abort: repository requires features unknown to this Mercurial: exp-revlogv2.unknown!
(see https://mercurial-scm.org/wiki/MissingRequirement for more information)
[255]
$ cd ..
Can create and open repo with revlog v2 requirement
$ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
> [experimental]
> revlogv2 = enable-unstable-format-and-corrupt-my-data
> EOF
$ hg init empty-repo
$ cd empty-repo
$ cat .hg/requires
dotencode
exp-revlogv2.1
fncache
sparserevlog
store
$ hg log
Unknown flags to revlog are rejected
>>> with open('.hg/store/00changelog.i', 'wb') as fh:
... fh.write(b'\x00\x04\xde\xad') and None
$ hg log
abort: unknown flags (0x04) in version 57005 revlog 00changelog.i!
[255]
$ cd ..
Writing a simple revlog v2 works
$ hg init simple
$ cd simple
$ touch foo
$ hg -q commit -A -m initial
$ hg log
changeset: 0:96ee1d7354c4
tag: tip
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
summary: initial
Header written as expected
$ f --hexdump --bytes 4 .hg/store/00changelog.i
.hg/store/00changelog.i:
0000: 00 01 de ad |....|
$ f --hexdump --bytes 4 .hg/store/data/foo.i
.hg/store/data/foo.i:
0000: 00 01 de ad |....|