view mercurial/scmwindows.py @ 44905:f330d6117a5b

relnotes: advertize the possibility to use rust I think the rust work may have been mentioned in the release notes, but if so only in passing, and not as an invitation to try it out. I think the next version is a decent time to do this, because the rust doesn't come with performance regressions AFAIK, speeds up status noticeably when it applies, which is the case for most invocations of status, and doesn't have the undesirable restriction of regex around empty patterns anymore. I am cheating a bit, because I'm giving numbers for `hg status` in mozilla-central, but they have one hgignore pattern that uses lookaround, ".vscode/(?!extensions\.json|tasks\.json", which I took out as it would cause a fallback to python when unknown files are requested. But it seems that they could express their hgignore differently if they were so inclined. Not sure if there are limitation other than linux-only that I am not thinking of but would be worth mentioning upfront, to avoid disappointing users? Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8604
author Valentin Gatien-Baron <valentin.gatienbaron@gmail.com>
date Sat, 30 May 2020 12:36:00 -0400
parents 1ccf340acf14
children 9ac96b9fa76e
line wrap: on
line source

from __future__ import absolute_import

import os

from . import (
    encoding,
    pycompat,
    util,
    win32,
)

try:
    import _winreg as winreg  # pytype: disable=import-error

    winreg.CloseKey
except ImportError:
    # py2 only
    import winreg  # pytype: disable=import-error

# MS-DOS 'more' is the only pager available by default on Windows.
fallbackpager = b'more'


def systemrcpath():
    '''return default os-specific hgrc search path'''
    rcpath = []
    filename = win32.executablepath()
    # Use mercurial.ini found in directory with hg.exe
    progrc = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(filename), b'mercurial.ini')
    rcpath.append(progrc)

    def _processdir(progrcd):
        if os.path.isdir(progrcd):
            for f, kind in util.listdir(progrcd):
                if f.endswith(b'.rc'):
                    rcpath.append(os.path.join(progrcd, f))

    # Use hgrc.d found in directory with hg.exe
    _processdir(os.path.join(os.path.dirname(filename), b'hgrc.d'))

    # treat a PROGRAMDATA directory as equivalent to /etc/mercurial
    programdata = encoding.environ.get(b'PROGRAMDATA')
    if programdata:
        programdata = os.path.join(programdata, b'Mercurial')
        _processdir(os.path.join(programdata, b'hgrc.d'))

        ini = os.path.join(programdata, b'mercurial.ini')
        if os.path.isfile(ini):
            rcpath.append(ini)

        ini = os.path.join(programdata, b'hgrc')
        if os.path.isfile(ini):
            rcpath.append(ini)

    # next look for a system rcpath in the registry
    value = util.lookupreg(
        b'SOFTWARE\\Mercurial', None, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
    )
    if value and isinstance(value, bytes):
        value = util.localpath(value)
        for p in value.split(pycompat.ospathsep):
            if p.lower().endswith(b'mercurial.ini'):
                rcpath.append(p)
            else:
                _processdir(p)
    return rcpath


def userrcpath():
    '''return os-specific hgrc search path to the user dir'''
    home = os.path.expanduser(b'~')
    path = [os.path.join(home, b'mercurial.ini'), os.path.join(home, b'.hgrc')]
    userprofile = encoding.environ.get(b'USERPROFILE')
    if userprofile and userprofile != home:
        path.append(os.path.join(userprofile, b'mercurial.ini'))
        path.append(os.path.join(userprofile, b'.hgrc'))
    return path


def termsize(ui):
    return win32.termsize()