view tests/test-merge2.t @ 39037:ede768cfe83e

mail: always fall back to iso-8859-1 if us-ascii won't work (BC) It looks like this was a well-intentioned backwards compat hack for previewing the output of `hg email` in a stable way. Unfortunately I think this hack's time has come, because Python 3 does a much better job of ensuring it actually emits *valid* email messages. In particular, Python 2 would blindly trust us that the bytes we handed it were valid for the encoding we claimed, but Python 3 has some more sniff-tests that we end up failing. As a result, if we're going to print an email to the terminal, try us-ascii first, but if that fails go straight to iso-8859-1 which should be reasonably readable for ascii-compatible patch bodies. This *will* be a breaking change for ascii-incompatible textual patch content, but I don't think that's avoidable if we want to continue using the email library from the stdlib. .. bc:: Emails from the patchbomb extension will always be printed as though they are iso-8859-1 if they're not valid us-ascii. Previously, previewed emails were always claimed to be us-ascii and might contain invalid byte sequences. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D4231
author Augie Fackler <augie@google.com>
date Thu, 09 Aug 2018 21:04:15 -0400
parents f2719b387380
children 1850066f9e36
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  $ hg init t
  $ cd t
  $ echo This is file a1 > a
  $ hg add a
  $ hg commit -m "commit #0"
  $ echo This is file b1 > b
  $ hg add b
  $ hg commit -m "commit #1"
  $ rm b
  $ hg update 0
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ echo This is file b2 > b
  $ hg add b
  $ hg commit -m "commit #2"
  created new head
  $ cd ..; rm -r t

  $ mkdir t
  $ cd t
  $ hg init
  $ echo This is file a1 > a
  $ hg add a
  $ hg commit -m "commit #0"
  $ echo This is file b1 > b
  $ hg add b
  $ hg commit -m "commit #1"
  $ rm b
  $ hg update 0
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ echo This is file b2 > b
  $ hg commit -A -m "commit #2"
  adding b
  created new head
  $ cd ..; rm -r t

  $ hg init t
  $ cd t
  $ echo This is file a1 > a
  $ hg add a
  $ hg commit -m "commit #0"
  $ echo This is file b1 > b
  $ hg add b
  $ hg commit -m "commit #1"
  $ rm b
  $ hg remove b
  $ hg update 0
  0 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
  $ echo This is file b2 > b
  $ hg commit -A -m "commit #2"
  adding b
  created new head

  $ cd ..