Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@fb.com> [Mon, 24 Nov 2014 18:42:56 -0800] rev 23402
rename: properly report removed and added file as modified (
issue4458)
The result of 'hg rm' + 'hg rename' disagreed with the one from
'hg rename --force'. We align them on 'hg move --force' because it agrees with
what 'hg status' says after the commit.
Stopping reporting a modified file as added puts an end to the hg revert confusion in this
situation (
issue4458).
However, reporting the file as modified also prevents revert from restoring the copy
source. We fix this in a later changeset.
Git diff also stop reporting the add in the middle of the chain as add. Not
sure how important (and even wrong) it is.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@fb.com> [Wed, 26 Nov 2014 14:54:16 -0800] rev 23401
manifest: fix a bug where working copy file 'add' mark was buggy
Because the same dictionary was used to (1) get node from parent and (2) store
annotated version, we could end up with buggy values. For example with a chain
of renames:
$ hg mv b c
$ hg mv a b
The value from 'b' would be updated as "<old-a>a", then the value of c would be
updated as "<old-b>a'. With the current dictionary sharing this ends up with:
'<new-c>' == '<old-a>aa'
This value is double-wrong as we should use '<old-b>' and a single 'a'.
We now use a read-only value for lookup. The 'test-rename.t' test is impacted
because such a chained added file is suddenly detected as such.
anatoly techtonik <techtonik@gmail.com> [Wed, 26 Nov 2014 17:22:09 +0300] rev 23400
merge: be precise about what merged into what in short desc
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Tue, 11 Nov 2014 20:32:10 -0800] rev 23399
docker: add Docker files for running an Apache mod_wsgi server
I frequently find myself wanting to run hgweb in a production-like
environment, with a real HTTP server and multiple WSGI workers.
This patch introduces a Docker environment for running Mercurial
under Apache + mod_wsgi. With just a few command executions, it is
possible to spin up a Docker container running hgweb.
The container is tailored for Mercurial developers wanting to run
Mercurial from a source checkout. It is **not** meant to be something
suitable for production use.
The container provides a default hgweb environment with an empty
repository that allows pushes. You can thus start a container and push
your favorite repository there for quick testing.
The container is designed to allow customizations. Users can provide
their own hgweb configurations and mount existing directories containing
repositories into the container.
The behavior of the container and how to control things is documented in
the README.rst file.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Mon, 24 Nov 2014 16:17:02 -0800] rev 23398
merge: use None as filename for base in 'both created' conflicts
Instead of using a file that we know is not in the common ancestor's
maniffest, let's use None. This is safe as the only place that cares
about the value (applyupdates) already checks if the item exists in
the ancestor.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Mon, 24 Nov 2014 16:42:36 -0800] rev 23397
merge: break out "both renamed a -> b" case
We can further limit the scope of the 2-way merge case by breaking out
the case where the file was not created from scratch on both sides but
rather renamed in the same way (and is therefore a 3-way merge). This
involves copying some code, but it makes it clearer which case the
"Note:" in the code refers to.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Mon, 24 Nov 2014 16:16:34 -0800] rev 23396
merge: separate out "both created" cases
When 'f' is not in 'ma', 'a' will be 'nullid' and all the if/elif
conditions that check whether some one nodeid is equal to 'a' will
fail, and the else-clause will instead apply. We can make that more
explicit by creating a separate 'm' action for the case where 'a' is
'nullid'. While it does mean copying some code, perhaps it makes it a
little clearer which codepaths are possible, and which cases the
"Note:" in the code refers to. It also lets us make the debug action
messages a little more specific.
Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> [Mon, 24 Nov 2014 16:11:22 -0800] rev 23395
merge: indent to prepare for next patch
Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> [Tue, 25 Nov 2014 17:30:05 -0600] rev 23394
merge with stable
David Eckhardt <David.Eckhardt@cs.cmu.edu> [Tue, 25 Nov 2014 02:31:52 -0600] rev 23393
factotum: convert Plan 9 quoted string to Python string
Jeff Sickel <jas@corpus-callosum.com> [Tue, 25 Nov 2014 02:27:31 -0600] rev 23392
plan9: setup check for current python build
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Wed, 19 Nov 2014 22:27:55 -0500] rev 23391
add: check for the existence of a file matched inexactly before adding it
The change in
10697f29af2b created a problem on Windows and OS X:
--- /usr/local/mercurial/tests/test-
issue660.t
+++ /usr/local/mercurial/tests/test-
issue660.t.err
@@ -47,6 +47,8 @@
Should succeed - shadow removed:
$ hg add b
+ adding b/b
+ b/b does not exist!
Prior to the failing 'hg add', the file 'b/b' was added and committed, then 'b'
was recursively deleted from the filesystem, file 'b' was created and the delete
was recorded with 'hg rm --after'. This add is attempting to record the
existence of file 'b'.
A filesystem that is not case sensitive prevents dirstate.walk() from skipping
its step 3, and step 3 has the effect of inserting removed files into the walk
list. The Linux code doesn't run through step 3, and didn't exhibit the
problem. It's not clear why a non case sensitive filesystem triggers step 3,
given that the path normalization occurs in step 2.
Prior to
10697f29af2b, part of the check here was 'f not in repo.dirstate'
instead of 'f not in wctx'. Files in the 'r' state are filtered out of
context.__contains__() but not dirstate.__contains__(). Therefore the removed
file name wasn't added to the list of files to add when checking against
dirstate. That change was to allow removed files to be readded, but adding a
file that doesn't exist is nonsensical. If the user specifies a missing file,
it will be an exact match and will still fail.
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Thu, 20 Nov 2014 22:33:40 -0500] rev 23390
tests: choose the proper environment variable style for the platform
Windows was printing out 'commit $HG_NODE' instead of the actual hash.
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Thu, 20 Nov 2014 20:07:34 -0500] rev 23389
tests: fix another multi-statement hook for Windows
The double quotes are necessary, otherwise it tries to pipe into a program named
'short'. An '&' could serve as a command separator on Windows instead of ';',
but I don't see any obvious way to swap these depending on the platform. In
this case though, there really wasn't a need for multiple statements.
Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> [Wed, 19 Nov 2014 23:41:40 -0500] rev 23388
run-tests: set a default largefiles usercache in the default hgrc file
This fixes a test failure introduced in
4be754832829 on Windows and OS X, where
the cached largefile wasn't being deleted because the named .cache directory
didn't exist. It only existed on Linux because the test suite sets $HOME to the
directory of the test being run, and Linux uses $HOME/.cache by default.
Most of the other largefiles tests explicitly set this value at the top of their
scripts, but test-largefiles-update.t didn't pick that up when it was created.
Those scripts that do set a value will override this.
We could just set the parameter in the test-largefiles-update.t script, but
there are a few other non obvious tests that exercise largefiles too. These
largefiles end up being cached in the user's real cache, so proper hygiene
dictates that this not be left to each individual test script.