Mercurial > hg
view tests/notcapable @ 35998:dce43aaaf209
lfs: allow a pointer to be extracted from a context that removes the file
This is needed to let 'set:lfs()' and '{lfs_files}' work normally on removed
files.
Yuya suggested returning a null pointer for removed files, instead of the
pointer from the parent. The first attempt at this was to return None for a non
LFS file, and a (pointer, ctx) tuple to hold the pointer and context (or parent
pointer and context for a removed file). But this complicated the callers, even
the ones that didn't care about removed files.
Instead, let's use {} to represent a removed pointer. This has the added
convenience of being a useful representation in the template language, and only
affects the callers that care about removed files (and only slightly). Since
pointers are explicitly serialized with a call to a member function, there is no
danger of writing these to disk.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sat, 27 Jan 2018 18:56:24 -0500 |
parents | dedab036215d |
children | 28a4fb793ba1 |
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# Disable the $CAP wire protocol capability. if test -z "$CAP" then echo "CAP environment variable not set." fi cat > notcapable-$CAP.py << EOF from mercurial import extensions, localrepo, repository def extsetup(): extensions.wrapfunction(repository.peer, 'capable', wrapcapable) extensions.wrapfunction(localrepo.localrepository, 'peer', wrappeer) def wrapcapable(orig, self, name, *args, **kwargs): if name in '$CAP'.split(' '): return False return orig(self, name, *args, **kwargs) def wrappeer(orig, self): # Since we're disabling some newer features, we need to make sure local # repos add in the legacy features again. return localrepo.locallegacypeer(self) EOF echo '[extensions]' >> $HGRCPATH echo "notcapable-$CAP = `pwd`/notcapable-$CAP.py" >> $HGRCPATH