dirstate: don't fail when dropping a not-tracked file (
issue3080)
Complex merges with divergent renames can cause a file to be 'moved'
twice, causing dirstate.drop() to be called twice. Rather than try to
ensure there are no unexpected corner cases where this can happen, we
simply ignore drops of files that aren't tracked.
tests: fix readline escape characters in heredoctest.py/test-url.py
This fix mirrors the changes made to test-doctest.py in
b856071435f7
and
967adcf5910d.
Without this change, tests running heredoctest.py can fail on certain
versions of OS X when TERM is set to xterm-256color:
$ /opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/Resources/Python.app/Contents/MacOS/Python -m heredoctest <<EOF
> >>> open('b', 'w').write('this' * 1000)
> EOF
+ \x1b[?1034h (no-eol) (esc)
A similar problem occurs with test-url.py:
$ ./run-tests.py test-url.py
--- .../tests/test-url.py.out
+++ .../tests/test-url.py.err
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+
ERROR: .../test-url.py output changed
!
Failed test-url.py: output changed
# Ran 1 tests, 0 skipped, 1 failed.
i18n-pt_BR: synchronized with
a53888685a6c
i18n-ja: synchronized with
b357a972d6cd
minirst: use unicode string as intermediate form for replacement
# this change redones part of
521c8e0c93bf, backed out by
0ad0ebe67815
Some character encodings use ASCII characters other than
control/alphabet/digit as a part of multi-bytes characters, so direct
replacing with such characters on strings in local encoding causes
invalid byte sequences.
[mpm: test changed to simple doctest]
largefiles: replace tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile with tempfile.mkstemp
This is consistent with the rest of Mercurial's code, mirroring the
try-finally-unlink structure elsewhere. Furthermore, it fixes the case where
largefiles throws an IOError on Windows when the temporary file is opened a
second time by copytocacheabsolute.
This patch creates the temporary file in the repo's largefiles store rather than
/tmp, which might be a different filesystem.
util: allow sha1() with no args
Normally this works because we replace util.sha1 with hashlib.sha1
after first use, but if the first user doesn't provide an arg, it
breaks.