dirstate.remove: during merges, remember the previous file state
We encode the previous state as a negative file size (AFAICS, previous
versions of hg always have size == 0 when state == 'r').
We save the state of 'm'erged and dirty files, because they're the
two states that indicate that a file has to be committed on a merge
to correctly record per-file history.
#!/bin/sh
hg init test
cd test
mkdir sub
cat >'sub/some "text".txt' <<ENDSOME
This is just some random text
that will go inside the file and take a few lines.
It is very boring to read, but computers don't
care about things like that.
ENDSOME
hg add 'sub/some "text".txt'
hg commit -d "1 0" -m "Just some text"
hg serve -p $HGPORT -A access.log -E error.log -d --pid-file=hg.pid
cat hg.pid >> $DAEMON_PIDS
("$TESTDIR/get-with-headers.py" localhost:$HGPORT '/?f=a23bf1310f6e;file=sub/some%20%22text%22.txt;style=raw' content-type content-length content-disposition) >getoutput.txt &
sleep 5
kill `cat hg.pid`
sleep 1 # wait for server to scream and die
cat getoutput.txt
cat access.log error.log | \
sed 's/^[^ ]*\( [^[]*\[\)[^]]*\(\].*\)$/host\1date\2/'