view tests/test-copy-move-merge.t @ 14732:e9ed3506f066 stable

backout of d04ba50e104d: allow to qpop/push with a dirty working copy The new behavior was breaking existing tools that relied on a sequence such as this: 1) start with a dirty working copy 2) qimport some patch 3) try to qpush it 4) old behavior would fail at this point due to outstanding changes. (new behavior would only fail if the outstanding changes and the patches changes intersect) 5) innocent user qrefreshes, gets his local changes in the imported patch It's worth considering if we can move this behavior to -f in the future.
author Idan Kamara <idankk86@gmail.com>
date Fri, 24 Jun 2011 23:25:42 +0300
parents ffb5c09ba822
children efdcce3fd2d5
line wrap: on
line source

  $ hg init t
  $ cd t

  $ echo 1 > a
  $ hg ci -qAm "first"

  $ hg cp a b
  $ hg mv a c
  $ echo 2 >> b
  $ echo 2 >> c

  $ hg ci -qAm "second"

  $ hg co -C 0
  1 files updated, 0 files merged, 2 files removed, 0 files unresolved

  $ echo 0 > a
  $ echo 1 >> a

  $ hg ci -qAm "other"

  $ hg merge --debug
    searching for copies back to rev 1
    unmatched files in other:
     b
     c
    all copies found (* = to merge, ! = divergent):
     c -> a *
     b -> a *
    checking for directory renames
  resolving manifests
   overwrite None partial False
   ancestor b8bf91eeebbc local add3f11052fa+ remote 17c05bb7fcb6
   a: remote moved to c -> m
   a: remote moved to b -> m
  preserving a for resolve of b
  preserving a for resolve of c
  removing a
  updating: a 1/2 files (50.00%)
  picked tool 'internal:merge' for b (binary False symlink False)
  merging a and b to b
  my b@add3f11052fa+ other b@17c05bb7fcb6 ancestor a@b8bf91eeebbc
   premerge successful
  updating: a 2/2 files (100.00%)
  picked tool 'internal:merge' for c (binary False symlink False)
  merging a and c to c
  my c@add3f11052fa+ other c@17c05bb7fcb6 ancestor a@b8bf91eeebbc
   premerge successful
  0 files updated, 2 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  (branch merge, don't forget to commit)

file b
  $ cat b
  0
  1
  2

file c
  $ cat c
  0
  1
  2