commands: add a new debug command to print merge state
We're going to be extending the merge state very soon, and this will give us a
way to test all that.
merge.mergestate: factor out code to validate v1/v2 records
We're going to need this in another place in upcoming patches.
localrepo: prevent wlock from being inherited when a transaction is running
Review feedback from Pierre-Yves David. A separate line of work is working to
ensure that dirstate writes are written to a separate 'pending' file while a
transaction is active. Lock inheritance currently conflicts with that, so dodge
the issue by simply preventing inheritance while a transaction is running.
Custom merge drivers aren't going to run inside a transaction, so this doesn't
affect that.
lock: add a way to prevent locks from being inherited
We want to prevent locks from being inherited sometimes (e.g. when there's a
currently running transaction, which will break a lot of assumptions we're
making in here.)
test-fncache: use args/kwargs for lock wrapper
This is annoying to keep up to date, and also just plain unnecessary.
rebase: suggest help -e histedit
Users unfamiliar with an extension should be reading the
documentation for the feature, not the command.
util: use tuple accessor to get accurate st_mtime value (
issue4836)
Because st.st_mtime is computed as 'sec + 1e-9 * nsec' and double is too narrow
to represent nanoseconds, int(st.st_mtime) can be 'sec + 1'. Therefore, that
value could be different from the one got by osutils.listdir().
This patch fixes the problem by accessing to raw st_mtime by tuple index.
It catches TypeError to fall back to st.st_mtime because our osutil.stat does
not support tuple index. In dirstate.normal(), 'st' is always a Python stat,
but in dirstate.status(), it can be either a Python stat or an osutil.stat.
Thanks to vgatien-baron@janestreet.com for finding the root cause of this
subtle problem.
util: extract stub function to get mtime with second accuracy
This function is trivial but will need a long comment why it can't use
st.st_mtime. See the next patch for details.