view tests/test-paths.t @ 16509:eab9119c5dee stable

rebase: skip resolved but emptied revisions When rebasing, if a conflict occurs and is resolved in a way the rebased revision becomes empty, it is not skipped, unlike revisions being emptied without conflicts. The reason is: - File 'x' is merged and resolved, merge.update() marks it as 'm' in the dirstate. - rebase.concludenode() calls localrepo.commit(), which calls localrepo.status() which calls dirstate.status(). 'x' shows up as 'm' and is unconditionnally added to the modified files list, instead of being checked again. - localrepo.commit() detects 'x' as changed an create a new revision where only the manifest parents and linkrev differ. Marking 'x' as modified without checking it makes sense for regular merges. But in rebase case, the merge looks normal but the second parent is usually discarded. When this happens, 'm' files in dirstate are a bit irrelevant and should be considered 'n' possibly dirty instead. That is what the current patch does. Another approach, maybe more efficient, would be to pass another flag to merge.update() saying the 'branchmerge' is a bit of a lie and recordupdate() should call dirstate.normallookup() instead of merge(). It is also tempting to add this logic to dirstate.setparents(), moving from two to one parent is what invalidates the 'm' markers. But this is a far bigger change to make. v2: succumb to the temptation and move the logic in dirstate.setparents(). mpm suggested trying _filecommit() first but it is called by commitctx() which knows nothing about the dirstate and comes too late into the game. A second approach was to rewrite the 'm' state into 'n' on the fly in dirstate.status() which failed for graft in the following case: $ hg init repo $ cd repo $ echo a > a $ hg ci -qAm0 $ echo a >> a $ hg ci -m1 $ hg up 0 1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved $ hg mv a b $ echo c > b $ hg ci -m2 created new head $ hg graft 1 --tool internal:local grafting revision 1 $ hg --config extensions.graphlog= glog --template '{rev} {desc|firstline}\n' @ 3 1 | o 2 2 | | o 1 1 |/ o 0 0 $ hg log -r 3 --debug --patch --git --copies changeset: 3:19cd7d1417952af13161b94c32e901769104560c tag: tip phase: draft parent: 2:b5c505595c9e9a12d5dd457919c143e05fc16fb8 parent: -1:0000000000000000000000000000000000000000 manifest: 3:3d27ce8d02241aa59b60804805edf103c5c0cda4 user: test date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 extra: branch=default extra: source=a03df74c41413a75c0a42997fc36c2de97b26658 description: 1 Here, revision 3 is created because there is a copy record for 'b' in the dirstate and thus 'b' is considered modified. But this information is discarded at commit time since 'b' content is unchanged. I do not know if discarding this information is correct or not, but at this time we cannot represent it anyway. This patch therefore implements the last solution of moving the logic into dirstate.setparents(). It does not sound crazy as 'm' files makes no sense with only one parent. It also makes dirstate.merge() calls .lookupnormal() if there is one parent, to preserve the invariant. I am a bit concerned about introducing this kind of stateful behaviour to existing code which historically treated setparents() as a basic setter without side-effects. And doing that during the code freeze.
author Patrick Mezard <patrick@mezard.eu>
date Sun, 22 Apr 2012 20:06:36 +0200
parents 8b84d040d9f9
children 61f3ca8e4d39
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  $ "$TESTDIR/hghave" no-msys || exit 80 # MSYS will translate /foo/bar as if it was a real file path

  $ hg init a
  $ hg clone a b
  updating to branch default
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ cd a
  $ echo '[paths]' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo 'dupe = ../b' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ echo 'expand = $SOMETHING/bar' >> .hg/hgrc
  $ hg in dupe
  comparing with $TESTTMP/b (glob)
  no changes found
  [1]
  $ cd ..
  $ hg -R a in dupe
  comparing with $TESTTMP/b (glob)
  no changes found
  [1]
  $ cd a
  $ hg paths
  dupe = $TESTTMP/b (glob)
  expand = $TESTTMP/a/$SOMETHING/bar (glob)
  $ SOMETHING=foo hg paths
  dupe = $TESTTMP/b (glob)
  expand = $TESTTMP/a/foo/bar (glob)
  $ SOMETHING=/foo hg paths
  dupe = $TESTTMP/b (glob)
  expand = /foo/bar
  $ hg paths -q
  dupe
  expand
  $ hg paths dupe
  $TESTTMP/b (glob)
  $ hg paths -q dupe
  $ hg paths unknown
  not found!
  [1]
  $ hg paths -q unknown
  [1]
  $ cd ..

'file:' disables [paths] entries for clone destination

  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH <<EOF
  > [paths]
  > gpath1 = http://hg.example.com
  > EOF

  $ hg clone a gpath1
  abort: cannot create new http repository
  [255]

  $ hg clone a file:gpath1
  updating to branch default
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ cd gpath1
  $ hg -q id
  000000000000