Mike Edgar <adgar@google.com> [Sat, 28 Nov 2015 04:11:14 -0500] rev 27146
rebase: propagate extra dict from rebase source changeset
This corrects extra propagation for the rebase command and the shelve command.
Mathias De Maré <mathias.demare@gmail.com> [Wed, 25 Nov 2015 18:26:48 +0100] rev 27145
histedit: add examples
Mathias De Maré <mathias.demare@gmail.com> [Wed, 25 Nov 2015 18:10:59 +0100] rev 27144
commands: add examples for 'addremove'
Mathias De Maré <mathias.demare@gmail.com> [Wed, 25 Nov 2015 18:10:31 +0100] rev 27143
commands: add example for 'hg add'
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Tue, 24 Nov 2015 15:16:25 -0800] rev 27142
extensions: refuse to load extensions if minimum hg version not met
As the author of several 3rd party extensions, I frequently see bug
reports from users attempting to run my extension with an old version
of Mercurial that I no longer support in my extension. Oftentimes, the
extension will import just fine. But as soon as we run extsetup(),
reposetup(), or get into the guts of a wrapped function, we encounter
an exception and abort. Today, Mercurial will print a message about
extensions that don't have a "testedwith" declaring explicit
compatibility with the current version.
The existing mechanism is a good start. But it isn't as robust as I
would like. Specifically, Mercurial assumes compatibility by default.
This means extension authors must perform compatibility checking in
their extsetup() or we wait and see if we encounter an abort at
runtime. And, compatibility checking can involve a lot of code and
lots of error checking. It's a lot of effort for extension authors.
Oftentimes, extension authors know which versions of Mercurial there
extension works on and more importantly where it is broken.
This patch introduces a magic "minimumhgversion" attribute in
extensions. When found, the extension loading mechanism will compare
the declared version against the current Mercurial version. If the
extension explicitly states we require a newer Mercurial version, a
warning is printed and the extension isn't loaded beyond importing
the Python module. This causes a graceful failure while alerting
the user of the compatibility issue.
I would be receptive to the idea of making the failure more fatal.
However, care would need to be taken to not criple every hg command.
e.g. the user may use `hg config` to fix the hgrc and if we aborted
trying to run that, the user would effectively be locked out of `hg`!
A potential future improvement to this functionality would be to catch
ImportError for the extension/module and parse the source code for
"minimumhgversion = 'XXX'" and do similar checking. This way we could
give more information about why the extension failed to load.
timeless <timeless@mozdev.org> [Wed, 25 Nov 2015 00:39:05 +0000] rev 27141
run-tests: add --slowtimeout and use it for slow tests
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sat, 31 Oct 2015 22:17:05 +0900] rev 27140
serve: unify cmdutil.service() calls of commandserver and hgweb
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sat, 31 Oct 2015 22:15:16 +0900] rev 27139
hgweb: extract factory function of httpservice object
The next patch will merge the cmdutil.service() calls of both commandserver
and hgweb. Before doing it, this patch wipes out the code specific to hgweb
from commands.serve().
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sat, 31 Oct 2015 21:57:45 +0900] rev 27138
hgweb: move httpservice object from commands module
This avoids the deep import of hgweb.server at the commands module.
Siddharth Agarwal <sid0@fb.com> [Wed, 25 Nov 2015 14:25:33 -0800] rev 27137
merge: move almost all change/delete conflicts to resolve phase (BC) (API)
We have finally laid all the groundwork to make this happen.
The only change/delete conflicts that haven't been moved are .hgsubstate
conflicts. Those are trickier to deal with and well outside the scope of this
series.
We add comprehensive testing not just for the initial selections but also for
re-resolves and all possible dirstate transitions caused by merge tools. That
testing managed to shake out several bugs in the way we were handling dirstate
transitions.
The other test changes are because we now treat change/delete conflicts as
proper merges, and increment the 'merged' counter rather than the 'updated'
counter. I believe this is the right approach here.
For third-party extensions, if they're interacting with filemerge code they
might have to deal with an absentfilectx rather than a regular filectx.
Still to come:
- add a 'leave unresolved' option to merges
- change the default for non-interactive change/delete conflicts to be 'leave
unresolved'
- add debug output to go alongside debug outputs for binary and symlink file
merges