Mercurial > hg
changeset 51720:e618a1756b08
typing: avoid some useless @overload definitions in `mercurial.util`
Apparently pytype considered the name as well as the type of each argument, and
generates @overload definitions if they don't match. At best this is clutter,
and can easily be removed.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 19 Jul 2024 16:38:53 -0400 |
parents | 7558cee89655 |
children | ed28085827ec |
files | mercurial/posix.py mercurial/win32.py mercurial/windows.py |
diffstat | 3 files changed, 21 insertions(+), 21 deletions(-) [+] |
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--- a/mercurial/posix.py Thu Jul 18 22:46:36 2024 -0400 +++ b/mercurial/posix.py Fri Jul 19 16:38:53 2024 -0400 @@ -386,20 +386,20 @@ return None # on posix platforms, every path is ok -def getfsmountpoint(dirpath: bytes) -> Optional[bytes]: +def getfsmountpoint(path: bytes) -> Optional[bytes]: """Get the filesystem mount point from a directory (best-effort) Returns None if we are unsure. Raises OSError on ENOENT, EPERM, etc. """ - return getattr(osutil, 'getfsmountpoint', lambda x: None)(dirpath) + return getattr(osutil, 'getfsmountpoint', lambda x: None)(path) -def getfstype(dirpath: bytes) -> Optional[bytes]: +def getfstype(path: bytes) -> Optional[bytes]: """Get the filesystem type name from a directory (best-effort) Returns None if we are unsure. Raises OSError on ENOENT, EPERM, etc. """ - return getattr(osutil, 'getfstype', lambda x: None)(dirpath) + return getattr(osutil, 'getfstype', lambda x: None)(path) def get_password() -> bytes: @@ -691,7 +691,7 @@ def lookupreg( key: bytes, - name: Optional[bytes] = None, + valname: Optional[bytes] = None, scope: Optional[Union[int, Iterable[int]]] = None, ) -> Optional[bytes]: return None
--- a/mercurial/win32.py Thu Jul 18 22:46:36 2024 -0400 +++ b/mercurial/win32.py Fri Jul 19 16:38:53 2024 -0400 @@ -460,10 +460,10 @@ return _getfileinfo(name).nNumberOfLinks -def samefile(path1: bytes, path2: bytes) -> bool: - '''Returns whether path1 and path2 refer to the same file or directory.''' - res1 = _getfileinfo(path1) - res2 = _getfileinfo(path2) +def samefile(fpath1: bytes, fpath2: bytes) -> bool: + '''Returns whether fpath1 and fpath2 refer to the same file or directory.''' + res1 = _getfileinfo(fpath1) + res2 = _getfileinfo(fpath2) return ( res1.dwVolumeSerialNumber == res2.dwVolumeSerialNumber and res1.nFileIndexHigh == res2.nFileIndexHigh @@ -471,10 +471,10 @@ ) -def samedevice(path1: bytes, path2: bytes) -> bool: - '''Returns whether path1 and path2 are on the same device.''' - res1 = _getfileinfo(path1) - res2 = _getfileinfo(path2) +def samedevice(fpath1: bytes, fpath2: bytes) -> bool: + '''Returns whether fpath1 and fpath2 are on the same device.''' + res1 = _getfileinfo(fpath1) + res2 = _getfileinfo(fpath2) return res1.dwVolumeSerialNumber == res2.dwVolumeSerialNumber @@ -711,16 +711,16 @@ return pi.dwProcessId -def unlink(f: bytes) -> None: +def unlink(path: bytes) -> None: '''try to implement POSIX' unlink semantics on Windows''' - if os.path.isdir(f): + if os.path.isdir(path): # use EPERM because it is POSIX prescribed value, even though # unlink(2) on directories returns EISDIR on Linux raise IOError( errno.EPERM, r"Unlinking directory not permitted: '%s'" - % encoding.strfromlocal(f), + % encoding.strfromlocal(path), ) # POSIX allows to unlink and rename open files. Windows has serious @@ -741,9 +741,9 @@ # implicit zombie filename blocking on a temporary name. for tries in range(10): - temp = b'%s-%08x' % (f, random.randint(0, 0xFFFFFFFF)) + temp = b'%s-%08x' % (path, random.randint(0, 0xFFFFFFFF)) try: - os.rename(f, temp) + os.rename(path, temp) break except FileExistsError: pass
--- a/mercurial/windows.py Thu Jul 18 22:46:36 2024 -0400 +++ b/mercurial/windows.py Fri Jul 19 16:38:53 2024 -0400 @@ -620,10 +620,10 @@ return None -def readlink(pathname: bytes) -> bytes: - path = pycompat.fsdecode(pathname) +def readlink(path: bytes) -> bytes: + path_str = pycompat.fsdecode(path) try: - link = os.readlink(path) + link = os.readlink(path_str) except ValueError as e: # On py2, os.readlink() raises an AttributeError since it is # unsupported. On py3, reading a non-link raises a ValueError. Simply