view mercurial/policy.py @ 30661:ced0d686ecb3

convert: add config option to control storing original revision common.commit.__init__ sets saverev=True by default. The side effect of this is that the hg sink will always set the "convert_revision" extras key to the commit being converted. This patch adds a config option to disable this behavior. While most consumers will want "convert_revision" to be a) written b) with the exact Git commit that was converted, some have use cases that prefer otherwise. In my case, I am performing significant rewrites of a Git repository *before* it is fed into `hg convert`. I have to do this because `hg convert` does not easily support the kind of transform I desire, even with extensions. (For the curious, I am "linearizing" the history of a GitHub repo by removing merge commits which add little value to the final history. It isn't easy to do this during `hg convert` because of Mercurial's file copy/rename metadata requirements.) In my scenario, my pre-convert transform stores a "convert_revision" key in the Git commit object containing the original Git commit ID. I want this original Git commit ID carried forward to Mercurial. By disabling the setting of this extra during `hg convert` and copying the value from the Git commit object, I can have the final "convert_revision" extra key contain the original Git commit ID. An added test verifies this exact scenario. This feature could likely be implemented for other VCS sources. But until someone needs the feature, I'm inclined to hold off implementing.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Thu, 22 Dec 2016 23:28:35 -0700
parents b4d117cee636
children 62939e0148f1
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# policy.py - module policy logic for Mercurial.
#
# Copyright 2015 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.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

import os
import sys

# Rules for how modules can be loaded. Values are:
#
#    c - require C extensions
#    allow - allow pure Python implementation when C loading fails
#    cffi - required cffi versions (implemented within pure module)
#    cffi-allow - allow pure Python implementation if cffi version is missing
#    py - only load pure Python modules
#
# By default, require the C extensions for performance reasons.
policy = 'c'
policynoc = ('cffi', 'cffi-allow', 'py')
policynocffi = ('c', 'py')

try:
    from . import __modulepolicy__
    policy = __modulepolicy__.modulepolicy
except ImportError:
    pass

# PyPy doesn't load C extensions.
#
# The canonical way to do this is to test platform.python_implementation().
# But we don't import platform and don't bloat for it here.
if '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names:
    policy = 'cffi'

# Our C extensions aren't yet compatible with Python 3. So use pure Python
# on Python 3 for now.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
    policy = 'py'

# Environment variable can always force settings.
policy = os.environ.get('HGMODULEPOLICY', policy)