hgext: add largefiles extension
This code has a number of contributors and a complicated history prior to its
introduction that can be seen by visiting:
https://developers.kilnhg.com/Repo/Kiln/largefiles/largefiles
http://hg.gerg.ca/hg-bfiles
and looking at the included copyright notices and contributors list.
patchbomb: drop loop in prompt
There are no longer any prompts that insist on being answered, so the
loop is no longer needed, nor is most of the other logic.
patchbomb: use prompt even in non-interactive mode
This matches our pre-existing behavior from:
changeset: 12197:
540693065d40
user: Christian Ebert <blacktrash@gmx.net>
files: hgext/patchbomb.py tests/test-patchbomb.t
description:
patchbomb: show prompt and selection in non-interactive mode
changeset: 8940:
01ada7b1861d
user: Mads Kiilerich <mads@kiilerich.com>
date: Sun Jun 21 03:13:38 2009 +0200
files: mercurial/ui.py tests/test-merge-prompt.out tests/test-merge-tools.out
description:
ui.prompt: Show prompt and selection in non-interactive mode
patchbomb: make it easy for the user to decline sending an intro message.
- prompt(): respect interactive mode; clarify logic a bit
- rename introneeded() to introwanted() and give it only one caller
- add 'numbered' arg to makepatch() so it does not need to call
introwanted()
- factor makeintro() out of getpatchmsgs(), so it's easier to skip the
intro message based on the user's behaviour
Unexpected but perfectly reasonable side effect: in non-interactive
mode, we don't show unanswerable "Cc" or "From" prompts anymore, so
remove those from the test expectations.
building: build inotify for sys.platform='linux*'
If Python interpreter was built under Linux 3.x kernel, it reports
sys.platform to be 'linux3' (it is fixed for Python 3, but not for 2.x).
This cancels building inotify extension, which was built only for 'linux2'
platform. Improved test checks if sys.platform begins with 'linux', and together
with test for kernel version to be greater than 2.6 it seems to cover all known
cases.
sslutil: abort when ssl module is needed but not found
It is apparently possible to compile Python without SSL support or leave it out
when installing precompiled binaries.
Mercurial on such Pythons would crash if the user tried to use https. Now it
will be reported as "abort: Python SSL support not found" instead.