view contrib/dockerlib.sh @ 34852:d45236f3d38e

log: add obsfate by default in changeset printer Having an obsfate by default in log will be useful for users to understand why they have obsolete and unstable changesets. Obsfate will only be shown for obsolete changesets, which only happens if people opt-in to experimental feature. But when obsolete changeset are visible, it is very useful to understand where they are. Having it in log could be sufficient for most people, so they don't have to learn a new command (like obslog which is itself useful in case of divergences). For example, when pulling and working directory parent become obsolete: $ hg pull ... working directory parent is obsolete! (f936c1697205) This message comes from the Evolve extension. Obsfate would comes handy: $ hg log -G o changeset: 2:6f91013c5136 | tag: tip | parent: 0:4ef7b558f3ec | user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> | date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200 | summary: A | | @ changeset: 1:f936c1697205 |/ user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> | date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200 | obsfate: rewritten using amend as 2:6f91013c5136 | summary: -A | o changeset: 0:feb4dd822b8c user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> date: Tue Oct 09 16:00:00 2017 +0200 summary: ROOT And once we update, we don't have an obsolete changeset in the log anymore so we don't show obsfate anymore, most users won't see obsfate often if they don't have obsolete changeset often: @ changeset: 2:6f91013c5136 | tag: tip | parent: 0:4ef7b558f3ec | user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> | date: Mon Oct 09 16:00:27 2017 +0200 | summary: A | o changeset: 0:feb4dd822b8c user: Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net> date: Tue Oct 09 16:00:00 2017 +0200 summary: ROOT
author Boris Feld <boris.feld@octobus.net>
date Thu, 05 Oct 2017 15:25:18 +0200
parents a3ac1ea611ce
children 1335bbfb066f
line wrap: on
line source

#!/bin/sh -eu

# This function exists to set up the DOCKER variable and verify that
# it's the binary we expect. It also verifies that the docker service
# is running on the system and we can talk to it.
function checkdocker() {
  if which docker.io >> /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
    DOCKER=docker.io
  elif which docker >> /dev/null 2>&1 ; then
    DOCKER=docker
  else
    echo "Error: docker must be installed"
    exit 1
  fi

  $DOCKER -h 2> /dev/null | grep -q Jansens && { echo "Error: $DOCKER is the Docking System Tray - install docker.io instead"; exit 1; }
  $DOCKER version | grep -Eq "^Client( version)?:" || { echo "Error: unexpected output from \"$DOCKER version\""; exit 1; }
  $DOCKER version | grep -Eq "^Server( version)?:" || { echo "Error: could not get docker server version - check it is running and your permissions"; exit 1; }
}

# Construct a container and leave its name in $CONTAINER for future use.
function initcontainer() {
  [ "$1" ] || { echo "Error: platform name must be specified"; exit 1; }

  DFILE="$ROOTDIR/contrib/docker/$1"
  [ -f "$DFILE" ] || { echo "Error: docker file $DFILE not found"; exit 1; }

  CONTAINER="hg-dockerrpm-$1"
  DBUILDUSER=build
  (
    cat $DFILE
    if [ $(uname) = "Darwin" ] ; then
        # The builder is using boot2docker on OS X, so we're going to
        # *guess* the uid of the user inside the VM that is actually
        # running docker. This is *very likely* to fail at some point.
        echo RUN useradd $DBUILDUSER -u 1000
    else
        echo RUN groupadd $DBUILDUSER -g `id -g` -o
        echo RUN useradd $DBUILDUSER -u `id -u` -g $DBUILDUSER -o
    fi
  ) | $DOCKER build --build-arg http_proxy --build-arg https_proxy --tag $CONTAINER -
}