##// END OF EJS Templates
pyoxidizer: use in-memory resources on non-Windows platforms...
pyoxidizer: use in-memory resources on non-Windows platforms In-memory resources were disabled for macOS in 7bc1beed, and for all platforms in c900d962. Unfortunately this made it so that we were no longer producing standalone binaries on these platforms, and would have to ship the .py and .pyc files alongside the pyoxidized binary. These changes are no longer necessary after f6b04591, which disabled pep517 and solved the issue we were encountering. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D11734

File last commit:

r48583:6df528ed stable
r49120:1a420a13 default
Show More
README.md
77 lines | 3.0 KiB | text/x-minidsrc | MarkdownLexer
Simon Sapin
rhg: Add build and config instructions to the README file...
r48583 # `rhg`
The `rhg` executable implements a subset of the functionnality of `hg`
using only Rust, to avoid the startup cost of a Python interpreter.
This subset is initially small but grows over time as `rhg` is improved.
When fallback to the Python implementation is configured (see below),
`rhg` aims to be a drop-in replacement for `hg` that should behave the same,
except that some commands run faster.
## Building
To compile `rhg`, either run `cargo build --release` from this `rust/rhg/`
directory, or run `make build-rhg` from the repository root.
The executable can then be found at `rust/target/release/rhg`.
## Mercurial configuration
`rhg` reads Mercurial configuration from the usual sources:
the user’s `~/.hgrc`, a repository’s `.hg/hgrc`, command line `--config`, etc.
It has some specific configuration in the `[rhg]` section:
* `on-unsupported` governs the behavior of `rhg` when it encounters something
that it does not support but “full” `hg` possibly does.
This can be in configuration, on the command line, or in a repository.
- `abort`, the default value, makes `rhg` print a message to stderr
to explain what is not supported, then terminate with a 252 exit code.
- `abort-silent` makes it terminate with the same exit code,
but without printing anything.
- `fallback` makes it silently call a (presumably Python-based) `hg`
subprocess with the same command-line parameters.
The `rhg.fallback-executable` configuration must be set.
* `fallback-executable`: path to the executable to run in a sub-process
when falling back to a Python implementation of Mercurial.
Antoine Cezar
rhg: add rhg crate...
r45503
Simon Sapin
rhg: Add build and config instructions to the README file...
r48583 * `allowed-extensions`: a list of extension names that `rhg` can ignore.
Mercurial extensions can modify the behavior of existing `hg` sub-commands,
including those that `rhg` otherwise supports.
Because it cannot load Python extensions, finding them
enabled in configuration is considered “unsupported” (see above).
A few exceptions are made for extensions that `rhg` does know about,
with the Rust implementation duplicating their behavior.
This configuration makes additional exceptions: `rhg` will proceed even if
those extensions are enabled.
## Installation and configuration example
For example, to install `rhg` as `hg` for the current user with fallback to
the system-wide install of Mercurial, and allow it to run even though the
`rebase` and `absorb` extensions are enabled, on a Unix-like platform:
* Build `rhg` (see above)
* Make sure the `~/.local/bin` exists and is in `$PATH`
* From the repository root, make a symbolic link with
`ln -s rust/target/release/rhg ~/.local/bin/hg`
* Configure `~/.hgrc` with:
```
[rhg]
on-unsupported = fallback
fallback-executable = /usr/bin/hg
allowed-extensions = rebase, absorb
```
* Check that the output of running
`hg notarealsubcommand`
starts with `hg: unknown command`, which indicates fallback.
* Check that the output of running
`hg notarealsubcommand --config rhg.on-unsupported=abort`
starts with `unsupported feature:`.