view tests/fakepatchtime.py @ 48217:e10f5dc7f5bf

pyoxidizer: add the user site to `sys.path` on macOS This allows 3rd party extensions that are installed with `pip` to be picked up, similar to what we do on Windows. PyOxidizer has a bug that prevents this from working without this extra help (see 95af358fcdfe), though it appears there's another wrinkle here with `sys._framework` too. I needed this to see if the problem[1] loading the keyring extension on Windows also occurs on macOS (it doesn't). [1] https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer/issues/445 Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D11452
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
date Fri, 17 Sep 2021 15:07:30 -0400
parents 89a2afe31e82
children 6000f5b25c9b
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# extension to emulate invoking 'patch.internalpatch()' at the time
# specified by '[fakepatchtime] fakenow'

from __future__ import absolute_import

from mercurial import (
    extensions,
    patch as patchmod,
    registrar,
)
from mercurial.utils import dateutil

configtable = {}
configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable)

configitem(
    b'fakepatchtime',
    b'fakenow',
    default=None,
)


def internalpatch(
    orig,
    ui,
    repo,
    patchobj,
    strip,
    prefix=b'',
    files=None,
    eolmode=b'strict',
    similarity=0,
):
    if files is None:
        files = set()
    r = orig(
        ui,
        repo,
        patchobj,
        strip,
        prefix=prefix,
        files=files,
        eolmode=eolmode,
        similarity=similarity,
    )

    fakenow = ui.config(b'fakepatchtime', b'fakenow')
    if fakenow:
        # parsing 'fakenow' in YYYYmmddHHMM format makes comparison between
        # 'fakenow' value and 'touch -t YYYYmmddHHMM' argument easy
        fakenow = dateutil.parsedate(fakenow, [b'%Y%m%d%H%M'])[0]
        for f in files:
            repo.wvfs.utime(f, (fakenow, fakenow))

    return r


def extsetup(ui):
    extensions.wrapfunction(patchmod, 'internalpatch', internalpatch)