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view tests/test-fix.t @ 47507:d4c795576aeb
dirstate-entry: turn dirstate tuple into a real object (like in C)
With dirstate V2, the stored information and actual format will change. This mean we need to start an a better abstraction for a dirstate entry that a tuple directly accessed.
By chance, the C code is already doing this and pretend to be a tuple. So it
should be fairly easy. We start with turning the tuple into an object, we will
slowly migrate the dirstate code to no longer use the tuple directly in later
changesets.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D10949
author | Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 03 Jul 2021 03:48:35 +0200 |
parents | bea4717415c0 |
children | 184d83ef2e59 |
line wrap: on
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A script that implements uppercasing of specific lines in a file. This approximates the behavior of code formatters well enough for our tests. $ UPPERCASEPY="$TESTTMP/uppercase.py" $ cat > $UPPERCASEPY <<EOF > import sys > from mercurial.utils.procutil import setbinary > setbinary(sys.stdin) > setbinary(sys.stdout) > stdin = getattr(sys.stdin, 'buffer', sys.stdin) > stdout = getattr(sys.stdout, 'buffer', sys.stdout) > lines = set() > for arg in sys.argv[1:]: > if arg == 'all': > stdout.write(stdin.read().upper()) > sys.exit(0) > else: > first, last = arg.split('-') > lines.update(range(int(first), int(last) + 1)) > for i, line in enumerate(stdin.readlines()): > if i + 1 in lines: > stdout.write(line.upper()) > else: > stdout.write(line) > EOF $ TESTLINES="foo\nbar\nbaz\nqux\n" $ printf $TESTLINES | "$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY foo bar baz qux $ printf $TESTLINES | "$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY all FOO BAR BAZ QUX $ printf $TESTLINES | "$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY 1-1 FOO bar baz qux $ printf $TESTLINES | "$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY 1-2 FOO BAR baz qux $ printf $TESTLINES | "$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY 2-3 foo BAR BAZ qux $ printf $TESTLINES | "$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY 2-2 4-4 foo BAR baz QUX Set up the config with two simple fixers: one that fixes specific line ranges, and one that always fixes the whole file. They both "fix" files by converting letters to uppercase. They use different file extensions, so each test case can choose which behavior to use by naming files. $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF > [extensions] > fix = > [experimental] > evolution.createmarkers=True > evolution.allowunstable=True > [fix] > uppercase-whole-file:command="$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY all > uppercase-whole-file:pattern=set:**.whole > uppercase-changed-lines:command="$PYTHON" $UPPERCASEPY > uppercase-changed-lines:linerange={first}-{last} > uppercase-changed-lines:pattern=set:**.changed > EOF Help text for fix. $ hg help fix hg fix [OPTION]... [FILE]... rewrite file content in changesets or working directory Runs any configured tools to fix the content of files. Only affects files with changes, unless file arguments are provided. Only affects changed lines of files, unless the --whole flag is used. Some tools may always affect the whole file regardless of --whole. If --working-dir is used, files with uncommitted changes in the working copy will be fixed. Note that no backup are made. If revisions are specified with --source, those revisions and their descendants will be checked, and they may be replaced with new revisions that have fixed file content. By automatically including the descendants, no merging, rebasing, or evolution will be required. If an ancestor of the working copy is included, then the working copy itself will also be fixed, and the working copy will be updated to the fixed parent. When determining what lines of each file to fix at each revision, the whole set of revisions being fixed is considered, so that fixes to earlier revisions are not forgotten in later ones. The --base flag can be used to override this default behavior, though it is not usually desirable to do so. (use 'hg help -e fix' to show help for the fix extension) options ([+] can be repeated): --all fix all non-public non-obsolete revisions --base REV [+] revisions to diff against (overrides automatic selection, and applies to every revision being fixed) -s --source REV [+] fix the specified revisions and their descendants -w --working-dir fix the working directory --whole always fix every line of a file (some details hidden, use --verbose to show complete help) $ hg help -e fix fix extension - rewrite file content in changesets or working copy (EXPERIMENTAL) Provides a command that runs configured tools on the contents of modified files, writing back any fixes to the working copy or replacing changesets. Here is an example configuration that causes 'hg fix' to apply automatic formatting fixes to modified lines in C++ code: [fix] clang-format:command=clang-format --assume-filename={rootpath} clang-format:linerange=--lines={first}:{last} clang-format:pattern=set:**.cpp or **.hpp The :command suboption forms the first part of the shell command that will be used to fix a file. The content of the file is passed on standard input, and the fixed file content is expected on standard output. Any output on standard error will be displayed as a warning. If the exit status is not zero, the file will not be affected. A placeholder warning is displayed if there is a non- zero exit status but no standard error output. Some values may be substituted into the command: {rootpath} The path of the file being fixed, relative to the repo root {basename} The name of the file being fixed, without the directory path If the :linerange suboption is set, the tool will only be run if there are changed lines in a file. The value of this suboption is appended to the shell command once for every range of changed lines in the file. Some values may be substituted into the command: {first} The 1-based line number of the first line in the modified range {last} The 1-based line number of the last line in the modified range Deleted sections of a file will be ignored by :linerange, because there is no corresponding line range in the version being fixed. By default, tools that set :linerange will only be executed if there is at least one changed line range. This is meant to prevent accidents like running a code formatter in such a way that it unexpectedly reformats the whole file. If such a tool needs to operate on unchanged files, it should set the :skipclean suboption to false. The :pattern suboption determines which files will be passed through each configured tool. See 'hg help patterns' for possible values. However, all patterns are relative to the repo root, even if that text says they are relative to the current working directory. If there are file arguments to 'hg fix', the intersection of these patterns is used. There is also a configurable limit for the maximum size of file that will be processed by 'hg fix': [fix] maxfilesize = 2MB Normally, execution of configured tools will continue after a failure (indicated by a non-zero exit status). It can also be configured to abort after the first such failure, so that no files will be affected if any tool fails. This abort will also cause 'hg fix' to exit with a non-zero status: [fix] failure = abort When multiple tools are configured to affect a file, they execute in an order defined by the :priority suboption. The priority suboption has a default value of zero for each tool. Tools are executed in order of descending priority. The execution order of tools with equal priority is unspecified. For example, you could use the 'sort' and 'head' utilities to keep only the 10 smallest numbers in a text file by ensuring that 'sort' runs before 'head': [fix] sort:command = sort -n head:command = head -n 10 sort:pattern = numbers.txt head:pattern = numbers.txt sort:priority = 2 head:priority = 1 To account for changes made by each tool, the line numbers used for incremental formatting are recomputed before executing the next tool. So, each tool may see different values for the arguments added by the :linerange suboption. Each fixer tool is allowed to return some metadata in addition to the fixed file content. The metadata must be placed before the file content on stdout, separated from the file content by a zero byte. The metadata is parsed as a JSON value (so, it should be UTF-8 encoded and contain no zero bytes). A fixer tool is expected to produce this metadata encoding if and only if the :metadata suboption is true: [fix] tool:command = tool --prepend-json-metadata tool:metadata = true The metadata values are passed to hooks, which can be used to print summaries or perform other post-fixing work. The supported hooks are: "postfixfile" Run once for each file in each revision where any fixer tools made changes to the file content. Provides "$HG_REV" and "$HG_PATH" to identify the file, and "$HG_METADATA" with a map of fixer names to metadata values from fixer tools that affected the file. Fixer tools that didn't affect the file have a value of None. Only fixer tools that executed are present in the metadata. "postfix" Run once after all files and revisions have been handled. Provides "$HG_REPLACEMENTS" with information about what revisions were created and made obsolete. Provides a boolean "$HG_WDIRWRITTEN" to indicate whether any files in the working copy were updated. Provides a list "$HG_METADATA" mapping fixer tool names to lists of metadata values returned from executions that modified a file. This aggregates the same metadata previously passed to the "postfixfile" hook. Fixer tools are run in the repository's root directory. This allows them to read configuration files from the working copy, or even write to the working copy. The working copy is not updated to match the revision being fixed. In fact, several revisions may be fixed in parallel. Writes to the working copy are not amended into the revision being fixed; fixer tools should always write fixed file content back to stdout as documented above. list of commands: fix rewrite file content in changesets or working directory (use 'hg help -v -e fix' to show built-in aliases and global options) There is no default behavior in the absence of --rev and --working-dir. $ hg init badusage $ cd badusage $ hg fix abort: no changesets specified (use --source or --working-dir) [255] $ hg fix --whole abort: no changesets specified (use --source or --working-dir) [255] $ hg fix --base 0 abort: no changesets specified (use --source or --working-dir) [255] Fixing a public revision isn't allowed. It should abort early enough that nothing happens, even to the working directory. $ printf "hello\n" > hello.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "hello" $ hg phase -r 0 --public $ hg fix -r 0 abort: cannot fix public changesets: 6470986d2e7b (see 'hg help phases' for details) [10] $ hg fix -r 0 --working-dir abort: cannot fix public changesets: 6470986d2e7b (see 'hg help phases' for details) [10] $ hg cat -r tip hello.whole hello $ cat hello.whole hello $ cd .. Fixing a clean working directory should do nothing. Even the --whole flag shouldn't cause any clean files to be fixed. Specifying a clean file explicitly should only fix it if the fixer always fixes the whole file. The combination of an explicit filename and --whole should format the entire file regardless. $ hg init fixcleanwdir $ cd fixcleanwdir $ printf "hello\n" > hello.changed $ printf "world\n" > hello.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "foo" $ hg fix --working-dir $ hg diff $ hg fix --working-dir --whole $ hg diff $ hg fix --working-dir * $ cat * hello WORLD $ hg revert --all --no-backup reverting hello.whole $ hg fix --working-dir * --whole $ cat * HELLO WORLD The same ideas apply to fixing a revision, so we create a revision that doesn't modify either of the files in question and try fixing it. This also tests that we ignore a file that doesn't match any configured fixer. $ hg revert --all --no-backup reverting hello.changed reverting hello.whole $ printf "unimportant\n" > some.file $ hg commit -Aqm "some other file" $ hg fix -r . $ hg cat -r tip * hello world unimportant $ hg fix -r . --whole $ hg cat -r tip * hello world unimportant $ hg fix -r . * $ hg cat -r tip * hello WORLD unimportant $ hg fix -r . * --whole --config experimental.evolution.allowdivergence=true 2 new content-divergent changesets $ hg cat -r tip * HELLO WORLD unimportant $ cd .. Fixing the working directory should still work if there are no revisions. $ hg init norevisions $ cd norevisions $ printf "something\n" > something.whole $ hg add adding something.whole $ hg fix --working-dir $ cat something.whole SOMETHING $ cd .. Test the effect of fixing the working directory for each possible status, with and without providing explicit file arguments. $ hg init implicitlyfixstatus $ cd implicitlyfixstatus $ printf "modified\n" > modified.whole $ printf "removed\n" > removed.whole $ printf "deleted\n" > deleted.whole $ printf "clean\n" > clean.whole $ printf "ignored.whole" > .hgignore $ hg commit -Aqm "stuff" $ printf "modified!!!\n" > modified.whole $ printf "unknown\n" > unknown.whole $ printf "ignored\n" > ignored.whole $ printf "added\n" > added.whole $ hg add added.whole $ hg remove removed.whole $ rm deleted.whole $ hg status --all M modified.whole A added.whole R removed.whole ! deleted.whole ? unknown.whole I ignored.whole C .hgignore C clean.whole $ hg fix --working-dir $ hg status --all M modified.whole A added.whole R removed.whole ! deleted.whole ? unknown.whole I ignored.whole C .hgignore C clean.whole $ cat *.whole ADDED clean ignored MODIFIED!!! unknown $ printf "modified!!!\n" > modified.whole $ printf "added\n" > added.whole Listing the files explicitly causes untracked files to also be fixed, but ignored files are still unaffected. $ hg fix --working-dir *.whole $ hg status --all M clean.whole M modified.whole A added.whole R removed.whole ! deleted.whole ? unknown.whole I ignored.whole C .hgignore $ cat *.whole ADDED CLEAN ignored MODIFIED!!! UNKNOWN $ cd .. Test that incremental fixing works on files with additions, deletions, and changes in multiple line ranges. Note that deletions do not generally cause neighboring lines to be fixed, so we don't return a line range for purely deleted sections. In the future we should support a :deletion config that allows fixers to know where deletions are located. $ hg init incrementalfixedlines $ cd incrementalfixedlines $ printf "a\nb\nc\nd\ne\nf\ng\n" > foo.txt $ hg commit -Aqm "foo" $ printf "zz\na\nc\ndd\nee\nff\nf\ngg\n" > foo.txt $ hg --config "fix.fail:command=echo" \ > --config "fix.fail:linerange={first}:{last}" \ > --config "fix.fail:pattern=foo.txt" \ > fix --working-dir $ cat foo.txt 1:1 4:6 8:8 $ cd .. Test that --whole fixes all lines regardless of the diffs present. $ hg init wholeignoresdiffs $ cd wholeignoresdiffs $ printf "a\nb\nc\nd\ne\nf\ng\n" > foo.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "foo" $ printf "zz\na\nc\ndd\nee\nff\nf\ngg\n" > foo.changed $ hg fix --working-dir $ cat foo.changed ZZ a c DD EE FF f GG $ hg fix --working-dir --whole $ cat foo.changed ZZ A C DD EE FF F GG $ cd .. We should do nothing with symlinks, and their targets should be unaffected. Any other behavior would be more complicated to implement and harder to document. #if symlink $ hg init dontmesswithsymlinks $ cd dontmesswithsymlinks $ printf "hello\n" > hello.whole $ ln -s hello.whole hellolink $ hg add adding hello.whole adding hellolink $ hg fix --working-dir hellolink $ hg status A hello.whole A hellolink $ cd .. #endif We should allow fixers to run on binary files, even though this doesn't sound like a common use case. There's not much benefit to disallowing it, and users can add "and not binary()" to their filesets if needed. The Mercurial philosophy is generally to not handle binary files specially anyway. $ hg init cantouchbinaryfiles $ cd cantouchbinaryfiles $ printf "hello\0\n" > hello.whole $ hg add adding hello.whole $ hg fix --working-dir 'set:binary()' $ cat hello.whole HELLO\x00 (esc) $ cd .. We have a config for the maximum size of file we will attempt to fix. This can be helpful to avoid running unsuspecting fixer tools on huge inputs, which could happen by accident without a well considered configuration. A more precise configuration could use the size() fileset function if one global limit is undesired. $ hg init maxfilesize $ cd maxfilesize $ printf "this file is huge\n" > hello.whole $ hg add adding hello.whole $ hg --config fix.maxfilesize=10 fix --working-dir ignoring file larger than 10 bytes: hello.whole $ cat hello.whole this file is huge $ cd .. If we specify a file to fix, other files should be left alone, even if they have changes. $ hg init fixonlywhatitellyouto $ cd fixonlywhatitellyouto $ printf "fix me!\n" > fixme.whole $ printf "not me.\n" > notme.whole $ hg add adding fixme.whole adding notme.whole $ hg fix --working-dir fixme.whole $ cat *.whole FIX ME! not me. $ cd .. If we try to fix a missing file, we still fix other files. $ hg init fixmissingfile $ cd fixmissingfile $ printf "fix me!\n" > foo.whole $ hg add adding foo.whole $ hg fix --working-dir foo.whole bar.whole bar.whole: $ENOENT$ $ cat *.whole FIX ME! $ cd .. Specifying a directory name should fix all its files and subdirectories. $ hg init fixdirectory $ cd fixdirectory $ mkdir -p dir1/dir2 $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ printf "bar\n" > dir1/bar.whole $ printf "baz\n" > dir1/dir2/baz.whole $ hg add adding dir1/bar.whole adding dir1/dir2/baz.whole adding foo.whole $ hg fix --working-dir dir1 $ cat foo.whole dir1/bar.whole dir1/dir2/baz.whole foo BAR BAZ $ cd .. Fixing a file in the working directory that needs no fixes should not actually write back to the file, so for example the mtime shouldn't change. $ hg init donttouchunfixedfiles $ cd donttouchunfixedfiles $ printf "NO FIX NEEDED\n" > foo.whole $ hg add adding foo.whole $ cp -p foo.whole foo.whole.orig $ cp -p foo.whole.orig foo.whole $ sleep 2 # mtime has a resolution of one or two seconds. $ hg fix --working-dir $ f foo.whole.orig --newer foo.whole foo.whole.orig: newer than foo.whole $ cd .. When a fixer prints to stderr, we don't assume that it has failed. We show the error messages to the user, and we still let the fixer affect the file it was fixing if its exit code is zero. Some code formatters might emit error messages on stderr and nothing on stdout, which would cause us the clear the file, except that they also exit with a non-zero code. We show the user which fixer emitted the stderr, and which revision, but we assume that the fixer will print the filename if it is relevant (since the issue may be non-specific). There is also a config to abort (without affecting any files whatsoever) if we see any tool with a non-zero exit status. $ hg init showstderr $ cd showstderr $ printf "hello\n" > hello.txt $ hg add adding hello.txt $ cat > $TESTTMP/work.sh <<'EOF' > printf 'HELLO\n' > printf "$@: some\nerror that didn't stop the tool" >&2 > exit 0 # success despite the stderr output > EOF $ hg --config "fix.work:command=sh $TESTTMP/work.sh {rootpath}" \ > --config "fix.work:pattern=hello.txt" \ > fix --working-dir [wdir] work: hello.txt: some [wdir] work: error that didn't stop the tool $ cat hello.txt HELLO $ printf "goodbye\n" > hello.txt $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg add adding foo.whole $ cat > $TESTTMP/fail.sh <<'EOF' > printf 'GOODBYE\n' > printf "$@: some\nerror that did stop the tool\n" >&2 > exit 42 # success despite the stdout output > EOF $ hg --config "fix.fail:command=sh $TESTTMP/fail.sh {rootpath}" \ > --config "fix.fail:pattern=hello.txt" \ > --config "fix.failure=abort" \ > fix --working-dir [wdir] fail: hello.txt: some [wdir] fail: error that did stop the tool abort: no fixes will be applied (use --config fix.failure=continue to apply any successful fixes anyway) [255] $ cat hello.txt goodbye $ cat foo.whole foo $ hg --config "fix.fail:command=sh $TESTTMP/fail.sh {rootpath}" \ > --config "fix.fail:pattern=hello.txt" \ > fix --working-dir [wdir] fail: hello.txt: some [wdir] fail: error that did stop the tool $ cat hello.txt goodbye $ cat foo.whole FOO $ hg --config "fix.fail:command=exit 42" \ > --config "fix.fail:pattern=hello.txt" \ > fix --working-dir [wdir] fail: exited with status 42 $ cd .. Fixing the working directory and its parent revision at the same time should check out the replacement revision for the parent. This prevents any new uncommitted changes from appearing. We test this for a clean working directory and a dirty one. In both cases, all lines/files changed since the grandparent will be fixed. The grandparent is the "baserev" for both the parent and the working copy. $ hg init fixdotandcleanwdir $ cd fixdotandcleanwdir $ printf "hello\n" > hello.whole $ printf "world\n" > world.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "the parent commit" $ hg parents --template '{rev} {desc}\n' 0 the parent commit $ hg fix --working-dir -r . $ hg parents --template '{rev} {desc}\n' 1 the parent commit $ hg cat -r . *.whole HELLO WORLD $ cat *.whole HELLO WORLD $ hg status $ cd .. Same test with a dirty working copy. $ hg init fixdotanddirtywdir $ cd fixdotanddirtywdir $ printf "hello\n" > hello.whole $ printf "world\n" > world.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "the parent commit" $ printf "hello,\n" > hello.whole $ printf "world!\n" > world.whole $ hg parents --template '{rev} {desc}\n' 0 the parent commit $ hg fix --working-dir -r . $ hg parents --template '{rev} {desc}\n' 1 the parent commit $ hg cat -r . *.whole HELLO WORLD $ cat *.whole HELLO, WORLD! $ hg status M hello.whole M world.whole $ cd .. When we have a chain of commits that change mutually exclusive lines of code, we should be able to do incremental fixing that causes each commit in the chain to include fixes made to the previous commits. This prevents children from backing out the fixes made in their parents. A dirty working directory is conceptually similar to another commit in the chain. $ hg init incrementallyfixchain $ cd incrementallyfixchain $ cat > file.changed <<EOF > first > second > third > fourth > fifth > EOF $ hg commit -Aqm "the common ancestor (the baserev)" $ cat > file.changed <<EOF > first (changed) > second > third > fourth > fifth > EOF $ hg commit -Aqm "the first commit to fix" $ cat > file.changed <<EOF > first (changed) > second > third (changed) > fourth > fifth > EOF $ hg commit -Aqm "the second commit to fix" $ cat > file.changed <<EOF > first (changed) > second > third (changed) > fourth > fifth (changed) > EOF $ hg fix -r . -r '.^' --working-dir $ hg parents --template '{rev}\n' 4 $ hg cat -r '.^^' file.changed first second third fourth fifth $ hg cat -r '.^' file.changed FIRST (CHANGED) second third fourth fifth $ hg cat -r . file.changed FIRST (CHANGED) second THIRD (CHANGED) fourth fifth $ cat file.changed FIRST (CHANGED) second THIRD (CHANGED) fourth FIFTH (CHANGED) $ cd .. If we incrementally fix a merge commit, we should fix any lines that changed versus either parent. You could imagine only fixing the intersection or some other subset, but this is necessary if either parent is being fixed. It prevents us from forgetting fixes made in either parent. $ hg init incrementallyfixmergecommit $ cd incrementallyfixmergecommit $ printf "a\nb\nc\n" > file.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "ancestor" $ printf "aa\nb\nc\n" > file.changed $ hg commit -m "change a" $ hg checkout '.^' 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ printf "a\nb\ncc\n" > file.changed $ hg commit -m "change c" created new head $ hg merge merging file.changed 0 files updated, 1 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved (branch merge, don't forget to commit) $ hg commit -m "merge" $ hg cat -r . file.changed aa b cc $ hg fix -r . --working-dir $ hg cat -r . file.changed AA b CC $ cd .. Abort fixing revisions if there is an unfinished operation. We don't want to make things worse by editing files or stripping/obsoleting things. Also abort fixing the working directory if there are unresolved merge conflicts. $ hg init abortunresolved $ cd abortunresolved $ echo "foo1" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "foo 1" $ hg update null 0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ echo "foo2" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "foo 2" $ hg --config extensions.rebase= rebase -r 1 -d 0 rebasing 1:c3b6dc0e177a tip "foo 2" merging foo.whole warning: conflicts while merging foo.whole! (edit, then use 'hg resolve --mark') unresolved conflicts (see 'hg resolve', then 'hg rebase --continue') [240] $ hg --config extensions.rebase= fix --working-dir abort: unresolved conflicts (use 'hg resolve') [255] $ hg --config extensions.rebase= fix -r . abort: rebase in progress (use 'hg rebase --continue', 'hg rebase --abort', or 'hg rebase --stop') [20] $ cd .. When fixing a file that was renamed, we should diff against the source of the rename for incremental fixing and we should correctly reproduce the rename in the replacement revision. $ hg init fixrenamecommit $ cd fixrenamecommit $ printf "a\nb\nc\n" > source.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "source revision" $ hg move source.changed dest.changed $ printf "a\nb\ncc\n" > dest.changed $ hg commit -m "dest revision" $ hg fix -r . $ hg log -r tip --copies --template "{file_copies}\n" dest.changed (source.changed) $ hg cat -r tip dest.changed a b CC $ cd .. When fixing revisions that remove files we must ensure that the replacement actually removes the file, whereas it could accidentally leave it unchanged or write an empty string to it. $ hg init fixremovedfile $ cd fixremovedfile $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ printf "bar\n" > bar.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add files" $ hg remove bar.whole $ hg commit -m "remove file" $ hg status --change . R bar.whole $ hg fix -r . foo.whole $ hg status --change tip M foo.whole R bar.whole $ cd .. If fixing a revision finds no fixes to make, no replacement revision should be created. $ hg init nofixesneeded $ cd nofixesneeded $ printf "FOO\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add file" $ hg log --template '{rev}\n' 0 $ hg fix -r . $ hg log --template '{rev}\n' 0 $ cd .. If fixing a commit reverts all the changes in the commit, we replace it with a commit that changes no files. $ hg init nochangesleft $ cd nochangesleft $ printf "FOO\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add file" $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -m "edit file" $ hg status --change . M foo.whole $ hg fix -r . $ hg status --change tip $ cd .. If we fix a parent and child revision together, the child revision must be replaced if the parent is replaced, even if the diffs of the child needed no fixes. However, we're free to not replace revisions that need no fixes and have no ancestors that are replaced. $ hg init mustreplacechild $ cd mustreplacechild $ printf "FOO\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add foo" $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -m "edit foo" $ printf "BAR\n" > bar.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add bar" $ hg log --graph --template '{rev} {files}' @ 2 bar.whole | o 1 foo.whole | o 0 foo.whole $ hg fix -r 0:2 $ hg log --graph --template '{rev} {files}' o 4 bar.whole | o 3 | | @ 2 bar.whole | | | x 1 foo.whole |/ o 0 foo.whole $ cd .. It's also possible that the child needs absolutely no changes, but we still need to replace it to update its parent. If we skipped replacing the child because it had no file content changes, it would become an orphan for no good reason. $ hg init mustreplacechildevenifnop $ cd mustreplacechildevenifnop $ printf "Foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add a bad foo" $ printf "FOO\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -m "add a good foo" $ hg fix -r . -r '.^' $ hg log --graph --template '{rev} {desc}' o 3 add a good foo | o 2 add a bad foo @ 1 add a good foo | x 0 add a bad foo $ cd .. Similar to the case above, the child revision may become empty as a result of fixing its parent. We should still create an empty replacement child. TODO: determine how this should interact with ui.allowemptycommit given that the empty replacement could have children. $ hg init mustreplacechildevenifempty $ cd mustreplacechildevenifempty $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add foo" $ printf "Foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -m "edit foo" $ hg fix -r . -r '.^' $ hg log --graph --template '{rev} {desc}\n' --stat o 3 edit foo | o 2 add foo foo.whole | 1 + 1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) @ 1 edit foo | foo.whole | 2 +- | 1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-) | x 0 add foo foo.whole | 1 + 1 files changed, 1 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-) $ cd .. Fixing a secret commit should replace it with another secret commit. $ hg init fixsecretcommit $ cd fixsecretcommit $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add foo" --secret $ hg fix -r . $ hg log --template '{rev} {phase}\n' 1 secret 0 secret $ cd .. We should also preserve phase when fixing a draft commit while the user has their default set to secret. $ hg init respectphasesnewcommit $ cd respectphasesnewcommit $ printf "foo\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "add foo" $ hg --config phases.newcommit=secret fix -r . $ hg log --template '{rev} {phase}\n' 1 draft 0 draft $ cd .. Debug output should show what fixer commands are being subprocessed, which is useful for anyone trying to set up a new config. $ hg init debugoutput $ cd debugoutput $ printf "foo\nbar\nbaz\n" > foo.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "foo" $ printf "Foo\nbar\nBaz\n" > foo.changed $ hg --debug fix --working-dir subprocess: * $TESTTMP/uppercase.py 1-1 3-3 (glob) $ cd .. Fixing an obsolete revision can cause divergence, so we abort unless the user configures to allow it. This is not yet smart enough to know whether there is a successor, but even then it is not likely intentional or idiomatic to fix an obsolete revision. $ hg init abortobsoleterev $ cd abortobsoleterev $ printf "foo\n" > foo.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "foo" $ hg ci --amend -m rewritten $ hg --hidden fix -r 0 abort: fixing obsolete revision could cause divergence [255] $ hg --hidden fix -r 0 --config experimental.evolution.allowdivergence=true 2 new content-divergent changesets $ hg cat -r tip foo.changed FOO $ cd .. Test all of the available substitution values for fixer commands. $ hg init substitution $ cd substitution $ mkdir foo $ printf "hello\ngoodbye\n" > foo/bar $ hg add adding foo/bar $ hg --config "fix.fail:command=printf '%s\n' '{rootpath}' '{basename}'" \ > --config "fix.fail:linerange='{first}' '{last}'" \ > --config "fix.fail:pattern=foo/bar" \ > fix --working-dir $ cat foo/bar foo/bar bar 1 2 $ cd .. The --base flag should allow picking the revisions to diff against for changed files and incremental line formatting. $ hg init baseflag $ cd baseflag $ printf "one\ntwo\n" > foo.changed $ printf "bar\n" > bar.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "first" $ printf "one\nTwo\n" > foo.changed $ hg commit -m "second" $ hg fix -w --base . $ hg status $ hg fix -w --base null $ cat foo.changed ONE TWO $ cat bar.changed BAR $ cd .. If the user asks to fix the parent of another commit, they are asking to create an orphan. We must respect experimental.evolution.allowunstable. $ hg init allowunstable $ cd allowunstable $ printf "one\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -Aqm "first" $ printf "two\n" > foo.whole $ hg commit -m "second" $ hg --config experimental.evolution.allowunstable=False fix -r '.^' abort: cannot fix changeset, as that will orphan 1 descendants (see 'hg help evolution.instability') [10] $ hg fix -r '.^' 1 new orphan changesets $ hg cat -r 2 foo.whole ONE $ cd .. The --base flag affects the set of files being fixed. So while the --whole flag makes the base irrelevant for changed line ranges, it still changes the meaning and effect of the command. In this example, no files or lines are fixed until we specify the base, but then we do fix unchanged lines. $ hg init basewhole $ cd basewhole $ printf "foo1\n" > foo.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "first" $ printf "foo2\n" >> foo.changed $ printf "bar\n" > bar.changed $ hg commit -Aqm "second" $ hg fix --working-dir --whole $ cat *.changed bar foo1 foo2 $ hg fix --working-dir --base 0 --whole $ cat *.changed BAR FOO1 FOO2 $ cd .. The execution order of tools can be controlled. This example doesn't work if you sort after truncating, but the config defines the correct order while the definitions are out of order (which might imply the incorrect order given the implementation of fix). The goal is to use multiple tools to select the lowest 5 numbers in the file. $ hg init priorityexample $ cd priorityexample $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [fix] > head:command = head -n 5 > head:pattern = numbers.txt > head:priority = 1 > sort:command = sort -n > sort:pattern = numbers.txt > sort:priority = 2 > EOF $ printf "8\n2\n3\n6\n7\n4\n9\n5\n1\n0\n" > numbers.txt $ hg add -q $ hg fix -w $ cat numbers.txt 0 1 2 3 4 And of course we should be able to break this by reversing the execution order. Test negative priorities while we're at it. $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [fix] > head:priority = -1 > sort:priority = -2 > EOF $ printf "8\n2\n3\n6\n7\n4\n9\n5\n1\n0\n" > numbers.txt $ hg fix -w $ cat numbers.txt 2 3 6 7 8 $ cd .. It's possible for repeated applications of a fixer tool to create cycles in the generated content of a file. For example, two users with different versions of a code formatter might fight over the formatting when they run hg fix. In the absence of other changes, this means we could produce commits with the same hash in subsequent runs of hg fix. This is a problem unless we support obsolescence cycles well. We avoid this by adding an extra field to the successor which forces it to have a new hash. That's why this test creates three revisions instead of two. $ hg init cyclictool $ cd cyclictool $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [fix] > swapletters:command = tr ab ba > swapletters:pattern = foo > EOF $ echo ab > foo $ hg commit -Aqm foo $ hg fix -r 0 $ hg fix -r 1 $ hg cat -r 0 foo --hidden ab $ hg cat -r 1 foo --hidden ba $ hg cat -r 2 foo ab $ cd .. We run fixer tools in the repo root so they can look for config files or other important things in the working directory. This does NOT mean we are reconstructing a working copy of every revision being fixed; we're just giving the tool knowledge of the repo's location in case it can do something reasonable with that. $ hg init subprocesscwd $ cd subprocesscwd $ cat >> .hg/hgrc <<EOF > [fix] > printcwd:command = "$PYTHON" -c "import os; print(os.getcwd())" > printcwd:pattern = relpath:foo/bar > filesetpwd:command = "$PYTHON" -c "import os; print('fs: ' + os.getcwd())" > filesetpwd:pattern = set:**quux > EOF $ mkdir foo $ printf "bar\n" > foo/bar $ printf "quux\n" > quux $ hg commit -Aqm blah $ hg fix -w -r . foo/bar $ hg cat -r tip foo/bar $TESTTMP/subprocesscwd $ cat foo/bar $TESTTMP/subprocesscwd $ cd foo $ hg fix -w -r . bar $ hg cat -r tip bar ../quux $TESTTMP/subprocesscwd quux $ cat bar ../quux $TESTTMP/subprocesscwd quux $ echo modified > bar $ hg fix -w bar $ cat bar $TESTTMP/subprocesscwd Apparently fixing p1() and its descendants doesn't include wdir() unless explicitly stated. $ hg fix -r '.::' $ hg cat -r . ../quux quux $ hg cat -r tip ../quux fs: $TESTTMP/subprocesscwd $ cat ../quux quux Clean files are not fixed unless explicitly named $ echo 'dirty' > ../quux $ hg fix --working-dir $ cat ../quux fs: $TESTTMP/subprocesscwd $ cd ../.. Tools configured without a pattern are ignored. It would be too dangerous to run them on all files, because this might happen while testing a configuration that also deletes all of the file content. There is no reasonable subset of the files to use as a default. Users should be explicit about what files are affected by a tool. This test also confirms that we don't crash when the pattern config is missing, and that we only warn about it once. $ hg init nopatternconfigured $ cd nopatternconfigured $ printf "foo" > foo $ printf "bar" > bar $ hg add -q $ hg fix --debug --working-dir --config "fix.nopattern:command=echo fixed" fixer tool has no pattern configuration: nopattern $ cat foo bar foobar (no-eol) $ hg fix --debug --working-dir --config "fix.nocommand:pattern=foo.bar" fixer tool has no command configuration: nocommand $ cd .. Tools can be disabled. Disabled tools do nothing but print a debug message. $ hg init disabled $ cd disabled $ printf "foo\n" > foo $ hg add -q $ hg fix --debug --working-dir --config "fix.disabled:command=echo fixed" \ > --config "fix.disabled:pattern=foo" \ > --config "fix.disabled:enabled=false" ignoring disabled fixer tool: disabled $ cat foo foo $ cd .. Test that we can configure a fixer to affect all files regardless of the cwd. The way we invoke matching must not prohibit this. $ hg init affectallfiles $ cd affectallfiles $ mkdir foo bar $ printf "foo" > foo/file $ printf "bar" > bar/file $ printf "baz" > baz_file $ hg add -q $ cd bar $ hg fix --working-dir --config "fix.cooltool:command=echo fixed" \ > --config "fix.cooltool:pattern=glob:**" $ cd .. $ cat foo/file fixed $ cat bar/file fixed $ cat baz_file fixed $ cd .. Tools should be able to run on unchanged files, even if they set :linerange. This includes a corner case where deleted chunks of a file are not considered changes. $ hg init skipclean $ cd skipclean $ printf "a\nb\nc\n" > foo $ printf "a\nb\nc\n" > bar $ printf "a\nb\nc\n" > baz $ hg commit -Aqm "base" $ printf "a\nc\n" > foo $ printf "a\nx\nc\n" > baz $ cat >> print.py <<EOF > import sys > for a in sys.argv[1:]: > print(a) > EOF $ hg fix --working-dir foo bar baz \ > --config "fix.changedlines:command=\"$PYTHON\" print.py \"Line ranges:\"" \ > --config 'fix.changedlines:linerange="{first} through {last}"' \ > --config 'fix.changedlines:pattern=glob:**' \ > --config 'fix.changedlines:skipclean=false' $ cat foo Line ranges: $ cat bar Line ranges: $ cat baz Line ranges: 2 through 2 $ cd .. Test various cases around merges. We were previously dropping files if they were created on only the p2 side of the merge, so let's test permutations of: * added, was fixed * added, considered for fixing but was already good * added, not considered for fixing * modified, was fixed * modified, considered for fixing but was already good * modified, not considered for fixing Before the bug was fixed where we would drop files, this test demonstrated the following issues: * new_in_r1.ignored, new_in_r1_already_good.changed, and > mod_in_r1_already_good.changed were NOT in the manifest for the merge commit * mod_in_r1.ignored had its contents from r0, NOT r1. We're also setting a named branch for every commit to demonstrate that the branch is kept intact and there aren't issues updating to another branch in the middle of fix. $ hg init merge_keeps_files $ cd merge_keeps_files $ for f in r0 mod_in_r1 mod_in_r2 mod_in_merge mod_in_child; do > for c in changed whole ignored; do > printf "hello\n" > $f.$c > done > printf "HELLO\n" > "mod_in_${f}_already_good.changed" > done $ hg branch -q r0 $ hg ci -Aqm 'r0' $ hg phase -p $ make_test_files() { > printf "world\n" >> "mod_in_$1.changed" > printf "world\n" >> "mod_in_$1.whole" > printf "world\n" >> "mod_in_$1.ignored" > printf "WORLD\n" >> "mod_in_$1_already_good.changed" > printf "new in $1\n" > "new_in_$1.changed" > printf "new in $1\n" > "new_in_$1.whole" > printf "new in $1\n" > "new_in_$1.ignored" > printf "ALREADY GOOD, NEW IN THIS REV\n" > "new_in_$1_already_good.changed" > } $ make_test_commit() { > make_test_files "$1" > hg branch -q "$1" > hg ci -Aqm "$2" > } $ make_test_commit r1 "merge me, pt1" $ hg co -q ".^" $ make_test_commit r2 "merge me, pt2" $ hg merge -qr 1 $ make_test_commit merge "evil merge" $ make_test_commit child "child of merge" $ make_test_files wdir $ hg fix -r 'not public()' -w $ hg log -G -T'{rev}:{shortest(node,8)}: branch:{branch} desc:{desc}' @ 8:c22ce900: branch:child desc:child of merge | o 7:5a30615a: branch:merge desc:evil merge |\ | o 6:4e5acdc4: branch:r2 desc:merge me, pt2 | | o | 5:eea01878: branch:r1 desc:merge me, pt1 |/ o 0:0c548d87: branch:r0 desc:r0 $ hg files -r tip mod_in_child.changed mod_in_child.ignored mod_in_child.whole mod_in_child_already_good.changed mod_in_merge.changed mod_in_merge.ignored mod_in_merge.whole mod_in_merge_already_good.changed mod_in_mod_in_child_already_good.changed mod_in_mod_in_merge_already_good.changed mod_in_mod_in_r1_already_good.changed mod_in_mod_in_r2_already_good.changed mod_in_r0_already_good.changed mod_in_r1.changed mod_in_r1.ignored mod_in_r1.whole mod_in_r1_already_good.changed mod_in_r2.changed mod_in_r2.ignored mod_in_r2.whole mod_in_r2_already_good.changed new_in_child.changed new_in_child.ignored new_in_child.whole new_in_child_already_good.changed new_in_merge.changed new_in_merge.ignored new_in_merge.whole new_in_merge_already_good.changed new_in_r1.changed new_in_r1.ignored new_in_r1.whole new_in_r1_already_good.changed new_in_r2.changed new_in_r2.ignored new_in_r2.whole new_in_r2_already_good.changed r0.changed r0.ignored r0.whole $ for f in "$(hg files -r tip)"; do hg cat -r tip $f -T'{path}:\n{data}\n'; done mod_in_child.changed: hello WORLD mod_in_child.ignored: hello world mod_in_child.whole: HELLO WORLD mod_in_child_already_good.changed: WORLD mod_in_merge.changed: hello WORLD mod_in_merge.ignored: hello world mod_in_merge.whole: HELLO WORLD mod_in_merge_already_good.changed: WORLD mod_in_mod_in_child_already_good.changed: HELLO mod_in_mod_in_merge_already_good.changed: HELLO mod_in_mod_in_r1_already_good.changed: HELLO mod_in_mod_in_r2_already_good.changed: HELLO mod_in_r0_already_good.changed: HELLO mod_in_r1.changed: hello WORLD mod_in_r1.ignored: hello world mod_in_r1.whole: HELLO WORLD mod_in_r1_already_good.changed: WORLD mod_in_r2.changed: hello WORLD mod_in_r2.ignored: hello world mod_in_r2.whole: HELLO WORLD mod_in_r2_already_good.changed: WORLD new_in_child.changed: NEW IN CHILD new_in_child.ignored: new in child new_in_child.whole: NEW IN CHILD new_in_child_already_good.changed: ALREADY GOOD, NEW IN THIS REV new_in_merge.changed: NEW IN MERGE new_in_merge.ignored: new in merge new_in_merge.whole: NEW IN MERGE new_in_merge_already_good.changed: ALREADY GOOD, NEW IN THIS REV new_in_r1.changed: NEW IN R1 new_in_r1.ignored: new in r1 new_in_r1.whole: NEW IN R1 new_in_r1_already_good.changed: ALREADY GOOD, NEW IN THIS REV new_in_r2.changed: NEW IN R2 new_in_r2.ignored: new in r2 new_in_r2.whole: NEW IN R2 new_in_r2_already_good.changed: ALREADY GOOD, NEW IN THIS REV r0.changed: hello r0.ignored: hello r0.whole: hello