view mercurial/strutil.py @ 27764:dd0c5f4d1b53

util: adjust 'datapath' to be correct in a frozen OS X package Apparently unlike py2exe, py2app copies the Mercurial source tree as-is to a Contents/Resources subdirectory of an app bundle, and places its binary stub in Contents/MacOS. (The Windows install has the 'hgext' and 'mercurial' modules in 'lib/library.zip', while the help and templates subdirectories have been moved out of the mercurial directory to the root of the installation. I assume that the python code living in a zip file is why "py2exe doesn't support __file__".) Therefore, prior to this change, Mercurial in a frozen app bundle on OS X would go looking for help *.txt, templates and locale info in Contents/MacOS, where they don't exist. There are only a handful of places that test for frozen, and not all of them are wrong for OS X, so it seems wiser to handle them on a case by case basis, rather that try to change mainfrozen(). The remaining cases are: 1) util.hgexecutable() wrongly points to the bundled python executable, and affects $HG in util.system() launched processes (e.g. external hooks) 2) util.hgcmd() wrongly points to the bundled python executable, but it seems to only affect 'hg serve -d' 3) hook._pythonhook() may be OK, since I didn't see anything outrageous when printing sys.path from an internal hook. I'm not sure if this special case is needed on OS X though. 4) sslutil._plainapplepython() is OK, because sys.executable is not /usr/bin/python, nor is it in /System/Library/Frameworks
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Sun, 10 Jan 2016 17:49:01 -0500
parents b723f05ec49b
children
line wrap: on
line source

# strutil.py - string utilities for Mercurial
#
# Copyright 2006 Vadim Gelfer <vadim.gelfer@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

def findall(haystack, needle, start=0, end=None):
    if end is None:
        end = len(haystack)
    if end < 0:
        end += len(haystack)
    if start < 0:
        start += len(haystack)
    while start < end:
        c = haystack.find(needle, start, end)
        if c == -1:
            break
        yield c
        start = c + 1

def rfindall(haystack, needle, start=0, end=None):
    if end is None:
        end = len(haystack)
    if end < 0:
        end += len(haystack)
    if start < 0:
        start += len(haystack)
    while end >= 0:
        c = haystack.rfind(needle, start, end)
        if c == -1:
            break
        yield c
        end = c - 1