i18n: use locale insensitive format for datetimes as intermediate representation (
issue3398)
on some non "en" locale environments, "hg convert" is aborted, because
"util.parsedate()" fails.
it fails in "memctx.__init__()" called by "putcommit()" of "convert".
in "hg convert", datetimes gotten from source repository
are usually formatted by "util.datestr()" with default format "%a %b
%d %H:%M:%S %Y %1%2".
but on some environments, "%a" and "%b" may cause locale sensitive
string, and such string may cause parse error in "util.parsedate()".
this path uses "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S %1%2" as intermediate representation
format for datetimes, because it consists only of locale insensitive
elements.
datetimes in above format are only used for passing them from
conversion logic to memctx object, so it doesn't have to be formatted
by locale sensitive one.
this patch just avoids locale sensitivity problem of "datestr()" and
"parsedate()" combintion.
alias: fix shell alias documentation (
issue3374)
Described behaviour was the one before shell alias argument handling was
reworked by
f853873fc66d mid-2010.
test-convert-svn-sink: add helper to smooth svn xml output
svnxml.py parses "svn log --xml" output and prints the attributes shared among
all tested svn versions. This fixes the test with svn 1.7.
Tested with svn 1.6.12 and 1.7.4.
convert/svn: make svn sink work with svn 1.7
"svn add file" now fails if "file" is already tracked. To filter them we have
to mirror the svn manifest in the sink.
Tested with svn 1.6.12 and 1.7.4.
docs: don't use :hg: at the beginning of lines in notes (
issue3397)
It seem like docutils 0.8 interpret ':hg:`command`' roles at the beginning of
indented lines in '.. note::' directives as a field that is an invalid argument
to the directive. It fails with 'Error in "note" directive: invalid option
block.' Docutils 0.7 accepted this arguably incorrect markup.
Reflowing the text makes the problem go away. A leading '\ ' could perhaps also
be used to mask the problem.
rebase: skip resolved but emptied revisions
When rebasing, if a conflict occurs and is resolved in a way the rebased
revision becomes empty, it is not skipped, unlike revisions being emptied
without conflicts.
The reason is:
- File 'x' is merged and resolved, merge.update() marks it as 'm' in the
dirstate.
- rebase.concludenode() calls localrepo.commit(), which calls
localrepo.status() which calls dirstate.status(). 'x' shows up as 'm' and is
unconditionnally added to the modified files list, instead of being checked
again.
- localrepo.commit() detects 'x' as changed an create a new revision where only
the manifest parents and linkrev differ.
Marking 'x' as modified without checking it makes sense for regular merges. But
in rebase case, the merge looks normal but the second parent is usually
discarded. When this happens, 'm' files in dirstate are a bit irrelevant and
should be considered 'n' possibly dirty instead. That is what the current patch
does.
Another approach, maybe more efficient, would be to pass another flag to
merge.update() saying the 'branchmerge' is a bit of a lie and recordupdate()
should call dirstate.normallookup() instead of merge().
It is also tempting to add this logic to dirstate.setparents(), moving from two
to one parent is what invalidates the 'm' markers. But this is a far bigger
change to make.
v2: succumb to the temptation and move the logic in dirstate.setparents(). mpm
suggested trying _filecommit() first but it is called by commitctx() which
knows nothing about the dirstate and comes too late into the game. A second
approach was to rewrite the 'm' state into 'n' on the fly in dirstate.status()
which failed for graft in the following case:
$ hg init repo
$ cd repo
$ echo a > a
$ hg ci -qAm0
$ echo a >> a
$ hg ci -m1
$ hg up 0
1 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ hg mv a b
$ echo c > b
$ hg ci -m2
created new head
$ hg graft 1 --tool internal:local
grafting revision 1
$ hg --config extensions.graphlog= glog --template '{rev} {desc|firstline}\n'
@ 3 1
|
o 2 2
|
| o 1 1
|/
o 0 0
$ hg log -r 3 --debug --patch --git --copies
changeset: 3:
19cd7d1417952af13161b94c32e901769104560c
tag: tip
phase: draft
parent: 2:
b5c505595c9e9a12d5dd457919c143e05fc16fb8
parent: -1:
0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
manifest: 3:
3d27ce8d02241aa59b60804805edf103c5c0cda4
user: test
date: Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
extra: branch=default
extra: source=
a03df74c41413a75c0a42997fc36c2de97b26658
description:
1
Here, revision 3 is created because there is a copy record for 'b' in the
dirstate and thus 'b' is considered modified. But this information is discarded
at commit time since 'b' content is unchanged. I do not know if discarding this
information is correct or not, but at this time we cannot represent it anyway.
This patch therefore implements the last solution of moving the logic into
dirstate.setparents(). It does not sound crazy as 'm' files makes no sense with
only one parent. It also makes dirstate.merge() calls .lookupnormal() if there
is one parent, to preserve the invariant.
I am a bit concerned about introducing this kind of stateful behaviour to
existing code which historically treated setparents() as a basic setter without
side-effects. And doing that during the code freeze.
test-rebase: exhibit revisions which should have been skipped
This will be fixed in the next commit.
v2:
- Display emptied grafted revisions
- Use --git flag
transplant: do not rollback on patching error (
issue3379)
Otherwise, all transplanted revisions are gone and the failing one cannot be
fixed (unless it is the first one).
I do not know what is the expected behaviour with rollback, probably something
pull-like. Non-conflicting cases should work as previously. But something like:
$ hg transplant r1 r2
commiting r1 as c1
failing r2
$ hg transplant --continue
committing r2 as c2
$ hg rollback
would reset the repository to its state before the "transplant --continue"
instead of the whole transplant session. To fix this we might need a way to
open an existing journal file, not sure this is worth the pain.