Optimize return value of util._matcher for common command line case
This will trigger every time somebody runs something like "hg diff"
or "hg status" without any arguments.
The important part here is returning util.always as the match function,
which is a much simpler (and faster) function than the usual return
value, and allows other code to just skip the filtering if it knows
all files will match.
change locate to use relglobs by default
This makes its default behaviour useful again (
issue108), and
changes it search the entire repository by default (instead
of just the cwd), just like all other commands.
It also hides
issue204 by default, but you'll still see the
same behaviour if you give it a relpath: pattern.
localrepo.walk: if we're walking a specific revision, sort the files
This is more consistent with our behaviour while walking the working directory.
dirstate.statwalk: explicitly test for ignored directories
This removes a hack where we appended '/' to a dirname so that:
- it would not appear on the "dc" dict
- it would always be matched by the match function
This was a contorted way of checking if the directory was matched by
some hgignore pattern, and it would still fail with some uses of
--include/--exclude patterns.
Things would still work fine if we removed the check altogether and
just appended things to "work" directly, but then we would end up
walking ignored directories too, which could be quite a bit of work.
This allows further simplification of the match function returned by
util._matcher, and fixes walking the working directory with a
--include pattern that matches only the end of a name.
util._matcher: unify pattern normalization
This should fix
issue347.
It also highlights one issue with the directory walking code when
you have an --include pattern that matches the end of a filename.
This is fixed by the next patch.
util.*matcher: change default "names" argument
names=['.'] means "include (recursively) only files from the current subdir";
the function then did a hack to walk the whole tree. Clean that up.
This also fixes a problem where "--include ." works in a subdir, but not
on the tree root.