util: avoid using hashlib on Python < 2.5 (
issue2278)
The following patch allows the use of python2.4 with a standalone
hashlib rather than assuming that python2.5 is in use when hashlib is
imported successfully.
revset: predicate to avoid lookup errors
A query like
head() and (descendants("bad") and not descendants("fix"))
(testing if repo heads are affected by a bug) will abort with a
RepoLookupError if either badrev or fixrev aren't found inside
the repository, which is not very informative.
The new predicate returns an empty set for lookup errors, so
head() and (descendants(present("bad")) and not descendants(present("fix")))
will behave as wanted even if those revisions are not found.
demandimport: store level argument on _demandmod instances
The 'level' argument to __import__ was added in Python 2.6, and is
specified for either relative or absolute imports. The fix introduced
in
e160f2312815 allowed such imports to proceed without failure, but
effectively disabled demandimport for them. This is particularly
unfortunate in Python 3.x, where *all* imports are either relative or
absolute.
The solution introduced here is to store the level argument on the
demandimport instance, and propagate it to _origimport() when its
value isn't None.
Please note that this patch hasn't been tested in Python 3.x, and thus
may not be complete. I'm worried about how sub-imports are handled; I
don't know what they are, or whether the level argument should be
modified for them. I've added 'TODO' notes to these cases; hopefully,
someone more knowledgable of these issues will deal with them.
revert: use opts.get
If you want to programatically perform a revert right now you need to
include a date=False parameter due to the use of opt["date"] instead
of opt.get("date").