Sean Farley <sean@farley.io> [Tue, 20 Jun 2017 15:18:40 -0700] rev 33007
bookmarks: factor out adding a list of bookmarks logic from commands
We keep the lock in the caller so that future devs are aware of the
locking implications.
Sean Farley <sean@farley.io> [Tue, 13 Jun 2017 11:10:22 -0700] rev 33006
bookmarks: factor out rename logic from commands
We keep the lock in the caller so that future devs are aware of the
locking implications.
Sean Farley <sean@farley.io> [Mon, 12 Jun 2017 23:02:48 -0700] rev 33005
bookmarks: factor out delete logic from commands
We keep the lock in the caller so that future devs are aware of the
locking implications.
Augie Fackler <augie@google.com> [Fri, 23 Jun 2017 15:30:27 -0400] rev 33004
merge with stable
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sun, 18 Jun 2017 00:40:58 +0900] rev 33003
revset: add startdepth limit to ancestors() as internal option
This is necessary to implement the set{gen} (set subscript) operator. For
example, set{-n} will be translated to ancestors(set, depth=n, startdepth=n).
https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/RevsetOperatorPlan#ideas_from_mpm
The UI is undecided and I doubt if the startdepth option would be actually
useful, so the option is hidden for now. 'depth' could be extended to take
min:max range, in which case, integer depth should select a single generation.
ancestors(set, depth=:y) # scan up to y-th generation
ancestors(set, depth=x:) # skip until (x-1)-th generation
ancestors(set, depth=x) # select only x-th generation
Any ideas are welcomed.
# reverse(ancestors(tip)) using hg repo
3) 0.075951
4) 0.076175
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sun, 18 Jun 2017 00:22:41 +0900] rev 33002
revset: add depth limit to ancestors()
This is proposed by the
issue5374, and will be a building block of set{gen}
(set subscript) operator.
https://www.mercurial-scm.org/wiki/RevsetOperatorPlan#ideas_from_mpm
# reverse(ancestors(tip)) using hg repo
2) 0.075408
3) 0.075951
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sun, 18 Jun 2017 00:11:48 +0900] rev 33001
dagop: compute depth in revancestors() generator
Surprisingly, this makes revset benchmark slightly faster. I don't know why,
but it appears that wrapping -inputrev by tuple is the key. So I decided to
just enable depth computation by default.
# reverse(ancestors(tip)) using hg repo
1) 0.081051
2) 0.075408
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sun, 18 Jun 2017 08:59:09 +0900] rev 33000
dagop: just compare with the last value to deduplicate input of revancestors()
Since we're using a max heap, the current rev should be a duplicate only
if it equals to the previous one. We don't have to maintain the whole seen
set.
# reverse(ancestors(tip)) using hg repo
0) 0.086420
1) 0.081051
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sun, 18 Jun 2017 17:22:57 +0900] rev 32999
dagop: bulk rename variables in revancestors() generator
- h -> pendingheap: "h" seems too short for variable of long lifetime
- current -> currev: future patches will add current "depth" variable
- parent -> prev or pctx: short lifetime, follows common naming rules
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sun, 18 Jun 2017 17:16:02 +0900] rev 32998
dagop: comment why revancestors() doesn't heapify input revs at once
I wondered why we're doing this complicated stuff without noticing the input
revs may be iterated lazily in descending order.
c1f666e27345 showed why.
Yuya Nishihara <yuya@tcha.org> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 22:33:23 +0900] rev 32997
dagop: unnest inner generator of revancestors()
This just moves iterate() to module-level function.
Denis Laxalde <denis.laxalde@logilab.fr> [Wed, 21 Jun 2017 17:17:17 +0200] rev 32996
hgweb: plug followlines action in annotate view
Add the followlines.js script and corresponding parameters as data attribute
on <tbody class="sourcelines"> element.
Extend CSS rules so that they also match the DOM structure of annotate view.
As previously, only address paper and gitweb styles (other styles do not have
followlines at all).
Denis Laxalde <denis.laxalde@logilab.fr> [Wed, 21 Jun 2017 17:07:51 +0200] rev 32995
hgweb: parameterize the tag name of elements holding followlines selection
While plugging followlines.js into "annotate" view, we'll need to walk a
different DOM structure from that of "filerevision" view. In particular, the
selectable source line element is a <tr> in annotate view (in contrast with a
<span> in filerevision view). So make this tag name a parameter of
followlines.js script by passing its value as a "selectabletag" data attribute
of <pre class="sourcelines"> element.
As <pre class="sourcelines"> tags are getting quite long in templates, rewrite
them on several lines.
Denis Laxalde <denis.laxalde@logilab.fr> [Wed, 21 Jun 2017 17:02:21 +0200] rev 32994
gitweb: wrap table rows of annotate view into a <tbody> element
We will use this element to hook data attribute for the followlines.js script
to be plugged in annotate view. Also this gets symmetrical with paper style
which already has a <tbody> element.
Denis Laxalde <denis@laxalde.org> [Thu, 22 Jun 2017 11:16:29 +0200] rev 32993
tests: update regex check for fetch error in test-clonebundles.t
On some systems, e.g. Docker container, the actual error may be:
error fetching bundle: [Errno 99] Cannot assign requested address
Update the regex to handle this case.
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com> [Tue, 20 Jun 2017 20:53:29 -0700] rev 32992
hgweb: use separate CSS class for navigation links in footer
2d93d2159e30 changed the styling of the "page_nav" CSS class to use
flexbox to separate elements within the <div>. I didn't realize that
this class was used outside of the links in the header. So this
resulted in incorrectly formatting links in the footer of various
pages. Fix that by introducing a new CSS class that preserves the
old CSS behavior.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 13:25:42 +0200] rev 32991
configitems: register 'ui.clonebundleprefers' as example for 'configlist'
This exercise the default value handling in 'configlist'.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 13:17:10 +0200] rev 32990
configitems: register 'patch.fuzz' as first example for 'configint'
This exercise the default value handling in 'configint'.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 13:08:03 +0200] rev 32989
configitems: issue a devel warning when overriding default config
If the option is registered, there is already a default value available and
passing a new one is at best redundant. So we issue a deprecation warning in
this case.
(note: there will be case were the default value will not be as simple as what
is currently possible. We'll upgrade the configitems code to handle them in
time.)
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Fri, 23 Jun 2017 13:22:04 +0200] rev 32988
eol: fix 'error' parameter name in the commitctx wrapper
Since its introduction in
9dfee83c93c8, the parameter has always been name
"error". Yet the eol extension have been using 'haserror' as the argument name,
breaking extensions with subclass passing 'error' as a keyword argument.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Fri, 23 Jun 2017 13:24:45 +0200] rev 32987
eol: import 'error' as 'errormod'
We need the 'error' name available to fix another bug, so we rename the imported
module.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 12:33:59 +0200] rev 32986
configitems: register 'ui.quiet' as first example
We now have a user and this works fine.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 12:15:28 +0200] rev 32985
configitems: get default values from the central registry when available
We do not have any registered config yet, but we are now ready to use them.
For now we ignore this feature for config access with "alternates". On the long
run, we expect alternates to be handled as "aliases" by the config item
themself.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 18:43:27 +0200] rev 32984
configitems: introduce a central registry for config option
We now have the appropriate infrastructure to register config items. Usage will
added in the next changeset.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Sat, 17 Jun 2017 18:41:55 +0200] rev 32983
configitems: add a basic class to hold config item information
The goal of this class is allow explicit declaration for the available config
option. This class will hold the data for one specific config item.
To keep it simple we start centralizing the handling of the default config value.
In the future we can expect more data to be carried on this class. For example:
- documentation,
- status (experimental, advanced, normal, deprecated),
- aliases,
- expected type,
- etc...
Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> [Wed, 21 Jun 2017 01:12:31 -0700] rev 32982
run-tests: fix -i when "#testcases" is used in .t test
The "#testcases" feature introduced by
7340465bd788 has issues with "-i"
because "-i" uses "test.name.endswith('.t')" to test if a test is .t or not.
test.name could now be something like "test-foo.t (caseA)" so the above
endswith test is no longer valid.
This patch changes the test to use "self.path" which won't have the issue.
Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> [Wed, 21 Jun 2017 01:12:31 -0700] rev 32981
run-tests: update .t reference output after reading the test
The .t file is both test input and reference output. They should always
match. However we have different code paths to read reference output
(Test.__init__ -> Test.readrefout) and test input (TTest._run) so they might
be inconsistent if somethings change the file between those two functions.
This patch assigns "lines" read by "_run" back to "_refout" if "_refout" is
not None (with --debug, see Test.readrefout) so reference output and test
input will always match.
Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> [Wed, 21 Jun 2017 01:05:20 -0700] rev 32980
run-tests: do not prompt changes (-i) if a race condition is detected
The race condition is like:
1. run-tests.py reads test-a.t as reference output, content A
2. run-tests.py runs the test (which could be content B, another race
condition fixed by the next patch, but assume it's content A here)
3. something changes test-a.t to content C
4. run-tests.py compares test output (content D) with content A
5. with "-i", run-tests.py prompts diff(A, D), while the file has content
C instead of A at this time
This patch detects the above case and tell the user to rerun the test if
they want to apply test changes.
Jun Wu <quark@fb.com> [Tue, 20 Jun 2017 23:22:38 -0700] rev 32979
patch: rewrite reversehunks (
issue5337)
The old reversehunks code accesses "crecord.uihunk._hunk", which is the raw
recordhunk without crecord selection information, therefore "revert -i"
cannot revert individual lines, aka.
issue5337.
The patch rewrites related logic to return the right reverse hunk for
revert. Namely,
1. "fromline" and "toline" are correctly swapped [1]
2. crecord.uihunk generates a correct reverse hunk [2]
Besides, reversehunks(hunks) will no longer modify its input "hunks", which
is more expected.
[1]: To explain why "fromline" and "toline" need to be swapped, take the
following example:
$ cat > a <<EOF
> 1
> 2
> 3
> 4
> EOF
$ cat > b <<EOF
> 2
> 3
> 5
> EOF
$ diff a b
1d0 <---- "1" is "fromline" and "0" is "toline"
< 1 and they are swapped if diff from the reversed direction
4c3 |
< 4 |
--- |
> 5 |
|
$ diff b a |
0a1 <---------+
> 1
3c4 <---- also "4c3" gets swapped to "3c4"
< 5
---
> 4
[2]: This is a bit tricky.
For example, given a file which is empty in working parent but has 3 lines
in working copy, and the user selection:
select hunk to discard
[x] +1
[ ] +2
[x] +3
The user intent is to drop "1" and "3" in working copy but keep "2", so the
reverse patch would be something like:
-1
2 (2 is a "context line")
-3
We cannot just take all selected lines and swap "-" and "+", which will be:
-1
-3
That patch won't apply because of "2". So the correct way is to insert "2"
as a "context line" by inserting it first then deleting it:
-2
+2
Therefore, the correct revert patch is:
-1
-2
+2
-3
It could be reordered to look more like a common diff hunk:
-1
-2
-3
+2
Note: It's possible to return multiple hunks so there won't be lines like
"-2", "+2". But the current implementation is much simpler.
For deletions, like the working parent has "1\n2\n3\n" and it was changed to
empty in working copy:
select hunk to discard
[x] -1
[ ] -2
[x] -3
The user intent is to drop the deletion of 1 and 3 (in other words, keep
those lines), but still delete "2".
The reverse patch is meant to be applied to working copy which is empty.
So the patch would be:
+1
+3
That is to say, there is no need to special handle the unselected "2" like
the above insertion case.
Pierre-Yves David <pierre-yves.david@octobus.net> [Wed, 21 Jun 2017 10:46:18 +0200] rev 32978
profiling: cope with configwith default value handling changes
Changeset
6ff6eb33f353 change 'configwith' behavior so that the default value is
run through the conversion function. In parallel a new user of 'configwith' got
introduced unaware of this coming behavior change. This broke profiling.
We resolve the situation by having the new conversion function cope with a
default value already using the right type.