i18n-ru: synchronized with
6b4dc7968bf0
hook: schedule run "b2x-transactionclose" for after lock release
Hooks that run after the transaction need to be able to touch the
repository. So we need to run them after the lock release. This is
similar to what the "changegroup" hook is doing in the
`addchangegroup` function.
repoview: issue a special message when filtering hidden changesets
Hidden changesets are by far the most common error case and is the only one[1]
that can reach the user. We move to a friendlier message with a hint about how
to access the data anyway. We should probably point to a help topic instead but
we do not have such a topic yet.
Example of the new output
abort: hidden revision '4'!
(use --hidden to access hidden revisions)
[1] Actually, filtering from "served" can also reach the user during certain
exchange operations.
repoview: include the filter name in filtered revision error messages
This will help user to debug. A more precise message will be issued
for the most common case ("visible" filter) in the next changesets.
example output:
- abort: filtered revision '4'!
+ abort: filtered revision '4' (not in 'visible' subset)!
largefiles: inline redundant toname function in status
Simpler and an optimization.
ssl: only use the dummy cert hack if using an Apple Python (
issue4410)
The hack for using certificate store in addition to the provided CAs resides in
Apple's OpenSSL. Apple's own Pythons will use it, but other custom built
Pythons might use a custom built OpenSSL without that hack and will fail when
exposed to the dummy cacert introduced in
d7f7f1860f00.
There do not seem to be a simple way to check from Python if we are using a
patched OpenSSL or if it is an Apple OpenSSL.
Instead, check if the Python executable resides in /usr/bin/python* or in
/System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/ and assume that all Pythons found
there will be native Pythons using the patched OpenSSL.
Custom built Pythons will not get the benefit of using the CAs from the
certificate store.