narrow: delegate the dirstate's narrow spec writing to the transaction
This make it more transactional and will help us to simplify their backup.
The implementation is not great, but it keep the patch simple as this is not the
time for a larger refactoring yet.
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ echo a > a
$ hg ci -Am0
adding a
$ hg -q clone . foo
$ touch .hg/store/journal
$ echo foo > a
$ hg ci -Am0
abort: abandoned transaction found
(run 'hg recover' to clean up transaction)
[255]
$ hg recover
rolling back interrupted transaction
(verify step skipped, run `hg verify` to check your repository content)
recover, explicit verify
$ touch .hg/store/journal
$ hg ci -Am0
abort: abandoned transaction found
(run 'hg recover' to clean up transaction)
[255]
$ hg recover --verify -q
recover, no verify
$ touch .hg/store/journal
$ hg ci -Am0
abort: abandoned transaction found
(run 'hg recover' to clean up transaction)
[255]
$ hg recover --no-verify
rolling back interrupted transaction
(verify step skipped, run `hg verify` to check your repository content)
Check that zero-size journals are correctly aborted:
#if unix-permissions no-root
$ hg bundle -qa repo.hg
$ chmod -w foo/.hg/store/00changelog.i
$ hg -R foo unbundle repo.hg
adding changesets
abort: Permission denied: '$TESTTMP/repo/foo/.hg/store/.00changelog.i-*' (glob)
[255]
$ if test -f foo/.hg/store/journal; then echo 'journal exists :-('; fi
#endif