parsers: backout version mismatch detection from
21dafd8546d1
This introduced mandatory recompilations and breaks pure mode in tests
i18n-pt_BR: synchronized with
734ff413eb7e
parsers: fail fast if Python has wrong minor version (
issue4110)
This change causes an informative ImportError to be raised when importing
the extension module parsers if the minor version of the currently-running
Python interpreter doesn't match that of the Python that was used when
compiling the extension module. Here is an example of what the new error
looks like:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 1, in <module>
import mercurial.parsers
ImportError: Python minor version mismatch: The Mercurial extension
modules were compiled with Python 2.7.6, but Mercurial is currently using
Python with sys.hexversion=
33883888: Python 2.5.6
(r256:88840, Nov 18 2012, 05:37:10)
[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple Clang 4.1 ((tags/Apple/clang-421.11.66))]
at: /opt/local/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.5/Resources/
Python.app/Contents/MacOS/Python
The reason for raising an error in this scenario is that Python's C API
is known not to be compatible from minor version to minor version, even
if sys.api_version is the same. See for example this Python bug report
about incompatibilities between 2.5 and 2.6+:
http://bugs.python.org/
issue8118
These incompatibilities can cause Mercurial to break in mysterious,
unforeseen ways. For example, when Mercurial compiled with Python 2.7 was
run with 2.5, the following crash occurred when running "hg status":
http://bz.selenic.com/show_bug.cgi?id=4110
After this crash was fixed, running with Python 2.5 no longer crashes, but
the following puzzling behavior still occurs:
$ hg status
...
File ".../mercurial/changelog.py", line 123, in __init__
revlog.revlog.__init__(self, opener, "00changelog.i")
File ".../mercurial/revlog.py", line 251, in __init__
d = self._io.parseindex(i, self._inline)
File ".../mercurial/revlog.py", line 158, in parseindex
index, cache = parsers.parse_index2(data, inline)
TypeError: data is not a string
which can be reproduced more simply with:
import mercurial.parsers as parsers
parsers.parse_index2("", True)
Both the crash and the TypeError occurred because the Python C API's
PyString_Check returns the wrong value when the C header files from
Python 2.7 are run with Python 2.5. This is an example of an
incompatibility of the sort mentioned in the Python bug report above.
Failing fast with an informative error message will result in a better
user experience in cases like the above. The information in the ImportError
will also simplify troubleshooting for those on Mercurial mailing lists,
the bug tracker, etc.
This patch only adds the version check to parsers.c, which is sufficient
to affect command-line commands like "hg status" and "hg summary".
An idea for a future improvement is to move the version-checking C code
to a more central location, and have it run when importing all
Mercurial extension modules and not just parsers.c.
hgk: fix tag list parser (
issue4101)
As tags may have embedded spaces, and "hg tags" command doesn't escape them,
the output of the command doesn't make a well-formed list, so we can't just
iterate over it. Instead, apply a simple regexp to transform it to a list
which we actually use. Line boundary matching should be enabled.
i18n: add the tool to check Mercurial specific translation problems in *.po
Existing tool like "msgfmt --check" can check typical translation
problems (missing "%s" in msgstr, for example), but can't check
Mercurial specific ones.
For example, "msgfmt --check" can't check whether the translated
string given to "ui.promptchoice()" is correct or not, even though
problems like below cause run-time error or unexpected behavior:
- less or more choices than msgid,
- choices without '&', or
- choices with '&' followed by none
This patch adds the tool to check Mercurial specific translation
problems in *.po files.
unshelve: add tests for unknown files
Adds a basic test for shelving/unshelving with an unknown file present.
Adds a test for unshelving on top of an existing unknown file.