Mercurial > public > mercurial-scm > hg
view tests/generate-working-copy-states.py @ 35168:b175e54c1103 stable
largefiles: pay attention to dropped standin files when updating largefiles
Previously, the largefile for a dropped standin would be deleted here, and then
restored from the cache. This had the effect of clobbering uncommitted changes
if a revert caused the file to be forgotten, which is not what happens with a
normal file. Now the removal and update is skipped for dropped largefiles, and
the corresponding standin is deleted from disk.
This was noticed when working on issue5738 because the forgotten standin files
were left behind, and that changes the behavior of the next rename to that
directory. My first attempt was to cleanup the standins before calling this.
That failed, because this function deletes the largefile if the corresponding
standin is missing.
This function is called by the revert command, merge (and therefore update), and
patch, via the scmutil.marktouched() override. So it should be pretty narrow in
scope.
I didn't mark issue5738 as fixed because the move related issues can still
happen if the main tree and the .hglf subtree get out of sync somehow. I don't
see an easy fix for that, but that should be an edge case. If whoever queues
this thinks it is good enough to close out the bug and can cram it into the
summary, go for it.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 12 Nov 2017 23:45:14 -0500 |
parents | bd872f64a8ba |
children | 27ab9264dd61 |
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# Helper script used for generating history and working copy files and content. # The file's name corresponds to its history. The number of changesets can # be specified on the command line. With 2 changesets, files with names like # content1_content2_content1-untracked are generated. The first two filename # segments describe the contents in the two changesets. The third segment # ("content1-untracked") describes the state in the working copy, i.e. # the file has content "content1" and is untracked (since it was previously # tracked, it has been forgotten). # # This script generates the filenames and their content, but it's up to the # caller to tell hg about the state. # # There are two subcommands: # filelist <numchangesets> # state <numchangesets> (<changeset>|wc) # # Typical usage: # # $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 1 # $ hg addremove --similarity 0 # $ hg commit -m 'first' # # $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 1 # $ hg addremove --similarity 0 # $ hg commit -m 'second' # # $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 wc # $ hg addremove --similarity 0 # $ hg forget *_*_*-untracked # $ rm *_*_missing-* from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function import os import sys # Generates pairs of (filename, contents), where 'contents' is a list # describing the file's content at each revision (or in the working copy). # At each revision, it is either None or the file's actual content. When not # None, it may be either new content or the same content as an earlier # revisions, so all of (modified,clean,added,removed) can be tested. def generatestates(maxchangesets, parentcontents): depth = len(parentcontents) if depth == maxchangesets + 1: for tracked in ('untracked', 'tracked'): filename = "_".join([(content is None and 'missing' or content) for content in parentcontents]) + "-" + tracked yield (filename, parentcontents) else: for content in ({None, 'content' + str(depth + 1)} | set(parentcontents)): for combination in generatestates(maxchangesets, parentcontents + [content]): yield combination # retrieve the command line arguments target = sys.argv[1] maxchangesets = int(sys.argv[2]) if target == 'state': depth = sys.argv[3] # sort to make sure we have stable output combinations = sorted(generatestates(maxchangesets, [])) # compute file content content = [] for filename, states in combinations: if target == 'filelist': print(filename) elif target == 'state': if depth == 'wc': # Make sure there is content so the file gets written and can be # tracked. It will be deleted outside of this script. content.append((filename, states[maxchangesets] or 'TOBEDELETED')) else: content.append((filename, states[int(depth) - 1])) else: print("unknown target:", target, file=sys.stderr) sys.exit(1) # write actual content for filename, data in content: if data is not None: f = open(filename, 'wb') f.write(data + '\n') f.close() elif os.path.exists(filename): os.remove(filename)