Mercurial > hg
changeset 44093:06e7e7652ac0
graftcopies: document why the function is useful at all
Despite having spent a significant amount on time on the copy-tracing
code, I thought `graftcopies()` (formerly known as
`duplicatecopies()`) was needed to duplicate copies after calling
`merge.update()` to do a merge (as `merge.graft()` does), but it's
actually usually not needed; `merge.update()` takes care of most
copies. This patch documents what the function is for.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7861
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 29 Dec 2019 17:53:48 -0800 |
parents | 833210fbd900 |
children | 521b4e3a42d7 |
files | mercurial/copies.py |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 15 insertions(+), 1 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/mercurial/copies.py Fri Dec 27 13:47:59 2019 -0800 +++ b/mercurial/copies.py Sun Dec 29 17:53:48 2019 -0800 @@ -857,7 +857,21 @@ def graftcopies(wctx, ctx, base): - """reproduce copies between base and ctx in the wctx""" + """reproduce copies between base and ctx in the wctx + + Unlike mergecopies(), this function will only consider copies between base + and ctx; it will ignore copies between base and wctx. Also unlike + mergecopies(), this function will apply copies to the working copy (instead + of just returning information about the copies). That makes it cheaper + (especially in the common case of base==ctx.p1()) and useful also when + experimental.copytrace=off. + + merge.update() will have already marked most copies, but it will only + mark copies if it thinks the source files are related (see + merge._related()). It will also not mark copies if the file wasn't modified + on the local side. This function adds the copies that were "missed" + by merge.update(). + """ new_copies = pathcopies(base, ctx) _filter(wctx.p1(), wctx, new_copies) for dst, src in pycompat.iteritems(new_copies):