lfs: special case the null:// usercache instead of treating it as a url
The previous code worked on Windows, but not on Unix, and a pending patch's test
failed. The url being used was something like "/tmp/.../client1/null://",
courtesy of ui.configpath(). Looking at the doc comment, this seems like it's
maybe not the right function to call (why should a relative cache path be
expanded relative to the repo root or config file?), but largefiles has been
using it since
8b8dd13295db (Oct 2011). It was introduced in
1b591f9b7fd2 (Jan
2011) without comment or callers. A grep over the whole history shows that only
largefiles used it until lfs and infinitepush came along recently.
It looks like if the `if not os.path.isabs(v) or "://" not in v` in configpath()
is changed to an 'and', both Linux and Windows are happy. I'm guessing that
"://" is to pick off URLs, so that seems reasonable. But I'm not sure why it
isn't explicitly "file://", and I thought that "file://foo" is relative anyway.
(At least, there are doctests for file:///tmp in util.url.) There is no mention
of this setting in the help, but it is referenced on the wiki page for
largefiles. (There's no mention that this is intended to be a URL, and the
example uses an absolute path.)
I don't want this blocking the rest of the lfs server discovery stuff. It was
also wrong to allow a file:// URL here, but not in largefiles.
This test doesn't yet work due to the way fsmonitor is integrated with test runner
$ exit 80
test sparse interaction with other extensions
$ hg init myrepo
$ cd myrepo
$ cat > .hg/hgrc <<EOF
> [extensions]
> sparse=
> strip=
> EOF
Test fsmonitor integration (if available)
TODO: make fully isolated integration test a'la https://github.com/facebook/watchman/blob/master/tests/integration/WatchmanInstance.py
(this one is using the systemwide watchman instance)
$ touch .watchmanconfig
$ echo "ignoredir1/" >> .hgignore
$ hg commit -Am ignoredir1
adding .hgignore
$ echo "ignoredir2/" >> .hgignore
$ hg commit -m ignoredir2
$ hg sparse --reset
$ hg sparse -I ignoredir1 -I ignoredir2 -I dir1
$ mkdir ignoredir1 ignoredir2 dir1
$ touch ignoredir1/file ignoredir2/file dir1/file
Run status twice to compensate for a condition in fsmonitor where it will check
ignored files the second time it runs, regardless of previous state (ask @sid0)
$ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor=
? dir1/file
$ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor=
? dir1/file
Test that fsmonitor ignore hash check updates when .hgignore changes
$ hg up -q ".^"
$ hg status --config extensions.fsmonitor=
? dir1/file
? ignoredir2/file