Mercurial > hg
view tests/dummyssh @ 18136:f23dea2b296e
copies: do not track backward copies, only renames (issue3739)
The inverse of a rename is a rename, but the inverse of a copy is not a copy.
Presenting it as such -- in particular, stuffing it into the same dict as real
copies -- causes bugs because other code starts believing the inverse copies
are real.
The only test whose output changes is test-mv-cp-st-diff.t. When a backwards
status -C command is run where a copy is involved, the inverse copy (which was
hitherto presented as a real copy) is no longer displayed.
Keeping track of inverse copies is useful in some situations -- composability
of diffs, for example, since adding "a" followed by an inverse copy "b" to "a"
is equivalent to a rename "b" to "a". However, representing them would require
a more complex data structure than the same dict in which real copies are also
stored.
author | Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 26 Dec 2012 15:04:07 -0800 |
parents | cdf9c43445df |
children | f266cb3f1c2b |
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#!/usr/bin/env python import sys import os os.chdir(os.getenv('TESTTMP')) if sys.argv[1] != "user@dummy": sys.exit(-1) os.environ["SSH_CLIENT"] = "127.0.0.1 1 2" log = open("dummylog", "ab") log.write("Got arguments") for i, arg in enumerate(sys.argv[1:]): log.write(" %d:%s" % (i+1, arg)) log.write("\n") log.close() hgcmd = sys.argv[2] if os.name == 'nt': # hack to make simple unix single quote quoting work on windows hgcmd = hgcmd.replace("'", '"') r = os.system(hgcmd) sys.exit(bool(r))