fix.py
615 lines
| 24.1 KiB
| text/x-python
|
PythonLexer
/ hgext / fix.py
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | # fix - rewrite file content in changesets and working copy | ||
# | ||||
# Copyright 2018 Google LLC. | ||||
# | ||||
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the | ||||
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. | ||||
"""rewrite file content in changesets or working copy (EXPERIMENTAL) | ||||
Provides a command that runs configured tools on the contents of modified files, | ||||
writing back any fixes to the working copy or replacing changesets. | ||||
Here is an example configuration that causes :hg:`fix` to apply automatic | ||||
formatting fixes to modified lines in C++ code:: | ||||
[fix] | ||||
clang-format:command=clang-format --assume-filename={rootpath} | ||||
clang-format:linerange=--lines={first}:{last} | ||||
clang-format:fileset=set:**.cpp or **.hpp | ||||
The :command suboption forms the first part of the shell command that will be | ||||
used to fix a file. The content of the file is passed on standard input, and the | ||||
fixed file content is expected on standard output. If there is any output on | ||||
standard error, the file will not be affected. Some values may be substituted | ||||
into the command:: | ||||
{rootpath} The path of the file being fixed, relative to the repo root | ||||
{basename} The name of the file being fixed, without the directory path | ||||
If the :linerange suboption is set, the tool will only be run if there are | ||||
changed lines in a file. The value of this suboption is appended to the shell | ||||
command once for every range of changed lines in the file. Some values may be | ||||
substituted into the command:: | ||||
{first} The 1-based line number of the first line in the modified range | ||||
{last} The 1-based line number of the last line in the modified range | ||||
The :fileset suboption determines which files will be passed through each | ||||
configured tool. See :hg:`help fileset` for possible values. If there are file | ||||
arguments to :hg:`fix`, the intersection of these filesets is used. | ||||
There is also a configurable limit for the maximum size of file that will be | ||||
processed by :hg:`fix`:: | ||||
[fix] | ||||
maxfilesize=2MB | ||||
""" | ||||
from __future__ import absolute_import | ||||
import collections | ||||
import itertools | ||||
import os | ||||
import re | ||||
import subprocess | ||||
from mercurial.i18n import _ | ||||
from mercurial.node import nullrev | ||||
from mercurial.node import wdirrev | ||||
Matt Harbison
|
r39851 | from mercurial.utils import ( | ||
procutil, | ||||
) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | from mercurial import ( | ||
cmdutil, | ||||
context, | ||||
copies, | ||||
error, | ||||
mdiff, | ||||
merge, | ||||
obsolete, | ||||
Augie Fackler
|
r37636 | pycompat, | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | registrar, | ||
scmutil, | ||||
util, | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r38554 | worker, | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | ) | ||
# Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for | ||||
# extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should | ||||
# be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or | ||||
# leave the attribute unspecified. | ||||
testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' | ||||
cmdtable = {} | ||||
command = registrar.command(cmdtable) | ||||
configtable = {} | ||||
configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable) | ||||
# Register the suboptions allowed for each configured fixer. | ||||
FIXER_ATTRS = ('command', 'linerange', 'fileset') | ||||
for key in FIXER_ATTRS: | ||||
configitem('fix', '.*(:%s)?' % key, default=None, generic=True) | ||||
# A good default size allows most source code files to be fixed, but avoids | ||||
# letting fixer tools choke on huge inputs, which could be surprising to the | ||||
# user. | ||||
configitem('fix', 'maxfilesize', default='2MB') | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r38984 | allopt = ('', 'all', False, _('fix all non-public non-obsolete revisions')) | ||
baseopt = ('', 'base', [], _('revisions to diff against (overrides automatic ' | ||||
'selection, and applies to every revision being ' | ||||
'fixed)'), _('REV')) | ||||
revopt = ('r', 'rev', [], _('revisions to fix'), _('REV')) | ||||
wdiropt = ('w', 'working-dir', False, _('fix the working directory')) | ||||
wholeopt = ('', 'whole', False, _('always fix every line of a file')) | ||||
usage = _('[OPTION]... [FILE]...') | ||||
@command('fix', [allopt, baseopt, revopt, wdiropt, wholeopt], usage) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | def fix(ui, repo, *pats, **opts): | ||
"""rewrite file content in changesets or working directory | ||||
Runs any configured tools to fix the content of files. Only affects files | ||||
with changes, unless file arguments are provided. Only affects changed lines | ||||
of files, unless the --whole flag is used. Some tools may always affect the | ||||
whole file regardless of --whole. | ||||
If revisions are specified with --rev, those revisions will be checked, and | ||||
they may be replaced with new revisions that have fixed file content. It is | ||||
desirable to specify all descendants of each specified revision, so that the | ||||
fixes propagate to the descendants. If all descendants are fixed at the same | ||||
time, no merging, rebasing, or evolution will be required. | ||||
If --working-dir is used, files with uncommitted changes in the working copy | ||||
will be fixed. If the checked-out revision is also fixed, the working | ||||
directory will update to the replacement revision. | ||||
When determining what lines of each file to fix at each revision, the whole | ||||
set of revisions being fixed is considered, so that fixes to earlier | ||||
revisions are not forgotten in later ones. The --base flag can be used to | ||||
override this default behavior, though it is not usually desirable to do so. | ||||
""" | ||||
Augie Fackler
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r37636 | opts = pycompat.byteskwargs(opts) | ||
Danny Hooper
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r37613 | if opts['all']: | ||
if opts['rev']: | ||||
raise error.Abort(_('cannot specify both "--rev" and "--all"')) | ||||
opts['rev'] = ['not public() and not obsolete()'] | ||||
opts['working_dir'] = True | ||||
Martin von Zweigbergk
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r38439 | with repo.wlock(), repo.lock(), repo.transaction('fix'): | ||
Danny Hooper
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r37200 | revstofix = getrevstofix(ui, repo, opts) | ||
basectxs = getbasectxs(repo, opts, revstofix) | ||||
workqueue, numitems = getworkqueue(ui, repo, pats, opts, revstofix, | ||||
basectxs) | ||||
Danny Hooper
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r38554 | fixers = getfixers(ui) | ||
# There are no data dependencies between the workers fixing each file | ||||
# revision, so we can use all available parallelism. | ||||
def getfixes(items): | ||||
for rev, path in items: | ||||
ctx = repo[rev] | ||||
olddata = ctx[path].data() | ||||
newdata = fixfile(ui, opts, fixers, ctx, path, basectxs[rev]) | ||||
# Don't waste memory/time passing unchanged content back, but | ||||
# produce one result per item either way. | ||||
yield (rev, path, newdata if newdata != olddata else None) | ||||
results = worker.worker(ui, 1.0, getfixes, tuple(), workqueue) | ||||
# We have to hold on to the data for each successor revision in memory | ||||
# until all its parents are committed. We ensure this by committing and | ||||
# freeing memory for the revisions in some topological order. This | ||||
# leaves a little bit of memory efficiency on the table, but also makes | ||||
# the tests deterministic. It might also be considered a feature since | ||||
# it makes the results more easily reproducible. | ||||
Danny Hooper
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r37200 | filedata = collections.defaultdict(dict) | ||
replacements = {} | ||||
Danny Hooper
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r38985 | wdirwritten = False | ||
Danny Hooper
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r38554 | commitorder = sorted(revstofix, reverse=True) | ||
Danny Hooper
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r38555 | with ui.makeprogress(topic=_('fixing'), unit=_('files'), | ||
total=sum(numitems.values())) as progress: | ||||
for rev, path, newdata in results: | ||||
progress.increment(item=path) | ||||
if newdata is not None: | ||||
filedata[rev][path] = newdata | ||||
numitems[rev] -= 1 | ||||
# Apply the fixes for this and any other revisions that are | ||||
# ready and sitting at the front of the queue. Using a loop here | ||||
# prevents the queue from being blocked by the first revision to | ||||
# be ready out of order. | ||||
while commitorder and not numitems[commitorder[-1]]: | ||||
rev = commitorder.pop() | ||||
ctx = repo[rev] | ||||
if rev == wdirrev: | ||||
writeworkingdir(repo, ctx, filedata[rev], replacements) | ||||
Danny Hooper
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r38985 | wdirwritten = bool(filedata[rev]) | ||
Danny Hooper
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r38555 | else: | ||
replacerev(ui, repo, ctx, filedata[rev], replacements) | ||||
del filedata[rev] | ||||
Danny Hooper
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r37200 | |||
Danny Hooper
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r38985 | cleanup(repo, replacements, wdirwritten) | ||
Danny Hooper
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r38847 | |||
def cleanup(repo, replacements, wdirwritten): | ||||
"""Calls scmutil.cleanupnodes() with the given replacements. | ||||
"replacements" is a dict from nodeid to nodeid, with one key and one value | ||||
for every revision that was affected by fixing. This is slightly different | ||||
from cleanupnodes(). | ||||
"wdirwritten" is a bool which tells whether the working copy was affected by | ||||
fixing, since it has no entry in "replacements". | ||||
Useful as a hook point for extending "hg fix" with output summarizing the | ||||
effects of the command, though we choose not to output anything here. | ||||
""" | ||||
replacements = {prec: [succ] for prec, succ in replacements.iteritems()} | ||||
scmutil.cleanupnodes(repo, replacements, 'fix', fixphase=True) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | |||
def getworkqueue(ui, repo, pats, opts, revstofix, basectxs): | ||||
""""Constructs the list of files to be fixed at specific revisions | ||||
It is up to the caller how to consume the work items, and the only | ||||
dependence between them is that replacement revisions must be committed in | ||||
topological order. Each work item represents a file in the working copy or | ||||
in some revision that should be fixed and written back to the working copy | ||||
or into a replacement revision. | ||||
Danny Hooper
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r38554 | |||
Work items for the same revision are grouped together, so that a worker | ||||
pool starting with the first N items in parallel is likely to finish the | ||||
first revision's work before other revisions. This can allow us to write | ||||
the result to disk and reduce memory footprint. At time of writing, the | ||||
partition strategy in worker.py seems favorable to this. We also sort the | ||||
items by ascending revision number to match the order in which we commit | ||||
the fixes later. | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | """ | ||
workqueue = [] | ||||
numitems = collections.defaultdict(int) | ||||
maxfilesize = ui.configbytes('fix', 'maxfilesize') | ||||
Danny Hooper
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r38554 | for rev in sorted(revstofix): | ||
Danny Hooper
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r37200 | fixctx = repo[rev] | ||
match = scmutil.match(fixctx, pats, opts) | ||||
for path in pathstofix(ui, repo, pats, opts, match, basectxs[rev], | ||||
fixctx): | ||||
if path not in fixctx: | ||||
continue | ||||
fctx = fixctx[path] | ||||
if fctx.islink(): | ||||
continue | ||||
if fctx.size() > maxfilesize: | ||||
ui.warn(_('ignoring file larger than %s: %s\n') % | ||||
(util.bytecount(maxfilesize), path)) | ||||
continue | ||||
workqueue.append((rev, path)) | ||||
numitems[rev] += 1 | ||||
return workqueue, numitems | ||||
def getrevstofix(ui, repo, opts): | ||||
"""Returns the set of revision numbers that should be fixed""" | ||||
revs = set(scmutil.revrange(repo, opts['rev'])) | ||||
for rev in revs: | ||||
checkfixablectx(ui, repo, repo[rev]) | ||||
if revs: | ||||
cmdutil.checkunfinished(repo) | ||||
checknodescendants(repo, revs) | ||||
if opts.get('working_dir'): | ||||
revs.add(wdirrev) | ||||
if list(merge.mergestate.read(repo).unresolved()): | ||||
raise error.Abort('unresolved conflicts', hint="use 'hg resolve'") | ||||
if not revs: | ||||
raise error.Abort( | ||||
'no changesets specified', hint='use --rev or --working-dir') | ||||
return revs | ||||
def checknodescendants(repo, revs): | ||||
if (not obsolete.isenabled(repo, obsolete.allowunstableopt) and | ||||
repo.revs('(%ld::) - (%ld)', revs, revs)): | ||||
raise error.Abort(_('can only fix a changeset together ' | ||||
'with all its descendants')) | ||||
def checkfixablectx(ui, repo, ctx): | ||||
"""Aborts if the revision shouldn't be replaced with a fixed one.""" | ||||
if not ctx.mutable(): | ||||
raise error.Abort('can\'t fix immutable changeset %s' % | ||||
(scmutil.formatchangeid(ctx),)) | ||||
if ctx.obsolete(): | ||||
# It would be better to actually check if the revision has a successor. | ||||
allowdivergence = ui.configbool('experimental', | ||||
'evolution.allowdivergence') | ||||
if not allowdivergence: | ||||
raise error.Abort('fixing obsolete revision could cause divergence') | ||||
def pathstofix(ui, repo, pats, opts, match, basectxs, fixctx): | ||||
"""Returns the set of files that should be fixed in a context | ||||
The result depends on the base contexts; we include any file that has | ||||
changed relative to any of the base contexts. Base contexts should be | ||||
ancestors of the context being fixed. | ||||
""" | ||||
files = set() | ||||
for basectx in basectxs: | ||||
Martin von Zweigbergk
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r38793 | stat = basectx.status(fixctx, match=match, listclean=bool(pats), | ||
listunknown=bool(pats)) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | files.update( | ||
set(itertools.chain(stat.added, stat.modified, stat.clean, | ||||
stat.unknown))) | ||||
return files | ||||
def lineranges(opts, path, basectxs, fixctx, content2): | ||||
"""Returns the set of line ranges that should be fixed in a file | ||||
Of the form [(10, 20), (30, 40)]. | ||||
This depends on the given base contexts; we must consider lines that have | ||||
changed versus any of the base contexts, and whether the file has been | ||||
renamed versus any of them. | ||||
Another way to understand this is that we exclude line ranges that are | ||||
common to the file in all base contexts. | ||||
""" | ||||
if opts.get('whole'): | ||||
# Return a range containing all lines. Rely on the diff implementation's | ||||
# idea of how many lines are in the file, instead of reimplementing it. | ||||
return difflineranges('', content2) | ||||
rangeslist = [] | ||||
for basectx in basectxs: | ||||
basepath = copies.pathcopies(basectx, fixctx).get(path, path) | ||||
if basepath in basectx: | ||||
content1 = basectx[basepath].data() | ||||
else: | ||||
content1 = '' | ||||
rangeslist.extend(difflineranges(content1, content2)) | ||||
return unionranges(rangeslist) | ||||
def unionranges(rangeslist): | ||||
"""Return the union of some closed intervals | ||||
>>> unionranges([]) | ||||
[] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 100)]) | ||||
[(1, 100)] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 100), (1, 100)]) | ||||
[(1, 100)] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 100), (2, 100)]) | ||||
[(1, 100)] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 99), (1, 100)]) | ||||
[(1, 100)] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 100), (40, 60)]) | ||||
[(1, 100)] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 49), (50, 100)]) | ||||
[(1, 100)] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 48), (50, 100)]) | ||||
[(1, 48), (50, 100)] | ||||
>>> unionranges([(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)]) | ||||
[(1, 6)] | ||||
""" | ||||
rangeslist = sorted(set(rangeslist)) | ||||
unioned = [] | ||||
if rangeslist: | ||||
unioned, rangeslist = [rangeslist[0]], rangeslist[1:] | ||||
for a, b in rangeslist: | ||||
c, d = unioned[-1] | ||||
if a > d + 1: | ||||
unioned.append((a, b)) | ||||
else: | ||||
unioned[-1] = (c, max(b, d)) | ||||
return unioned | ||||
def difflineranges(content1, content2): | ||||
"""Return list of line number ranges in content2 that differ from content1. | ||||
Line numbers are 1-based. The numbers are the first and last line contained | ||||
in the range. Single-line ranges have the same line number for the first and | ||||
last line. Excludes any empty ranges that result from lines that are only | ||||
present in content1. Relies on mdiff's idea of where the line endings are in | ||||
the string. | ||||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> from mercurial import pycompat | ||
>>> lines = lambda s: b'\\n'.join([c for c in pycompat.iterbytestr(s)]) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | >>> difflineranges2 = lambda a, b: difflineranges(lines(a), lines(b)) | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'', b'') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'a', b'') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'', b'A') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [(1, 1)] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'a', b'a') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'a', b'A') | ||
[(1, 1)] | ||||
>>> difflineranges2(b'ab', b'') | ||||
[] | ||||
>>> difflineranges2(b'', b'AB') | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [(1, 2)] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abc', b'ac') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'ab', b'aCb') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [(2, 2)] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abc', b'aBc') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [(2, 2)] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'ab', b'AB') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [(1, 2)] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abcde', b'aBcDe') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [(2, 2), (4, 4)] | ||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37230 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abcde', b'aBCDe') | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | [(2, 4)] | ||
""" | ||||
ranges = [] | ||||
for lines, kind in mdiff.allblocks(content1, content2): | ||||
firstline, lastline = lines[2:4] | ||||
if kind == '!' and firstline != lastline: | ||||
ranges.append((firstline + 1, lastline)) | ||||
return ranges | ||||
def getbasectxs(repo, opts, revstofix): | ||||
"""Returns a map of the base contexts for each revision | ||||
The base contexts determine which lines are considered modified when we | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r38609 | attempt to fix just the modified lines in a file. It also determines which | ||
files we attempt to fix, so it is important to compute this even when | ||||
--whole is used. | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | """ | ||
# The --base flag overrides the usual logic, and we give every revision | ||||
# exactly the set of baserevs that the user specified. | ||||
if opts.get('base'): | ||||
baserevs = set(scmutil.revrange(repo, opts.get('base'))) | ||||
if not baserevs: | ||||
baserevs = {nullrev} | ||||
basectxs = {repo[rev] for rev in baserevs} | ||||
return {rev: basectxs for rev in revstofix} | ||||
# Proceed in topological order so that we can easily determine each | ||||
# revision's baserevs by looking at its parents and their baserevs. | ||||
basectxs = collections.defaultdict(set) | ||||
for rev in sorted(revstofix): | ||||
ctx = repo[rev] | ||||
for pctx in ctx.parents(): | ||||
if pctx.rev() in basectxs: | ||||
basectxs[rev].update(basectxs[pctx.rev()]) | ||||
else: | ||||
basectxs[rev].add(pctx) | ||||
return basectxs | ||||
def fixfile(ui, opts, fixers, fixctx, path, basectxs): | ||||
"""Run any configured fixers that should affect the file in this context | ||||
Returns the file content that results from applying the fixers in some order | ||||
starting with the file's content in the fixctx. Fixers that support line | ||||
ranges will affect lines that have changed relative to any of the basectxs | ||||
(i.e. they will only avoid lines that are common to all basectxs). | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r39003 | |||
A fixer tool's stdout will become the file's new content if and only if it | ||||
exits with code zero. | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | """ | ||
newdata = fixctx[path].data() | ||||
for fixername, fixer in fixers.iteritems(): | ||||
if fixer.affects(opts, fixctx, path): | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r38896 | rangesfn = lambda: lineranges(opts, path, basectxs, fixctx, newdata) | ||
command = fixer.command(ui, path, rangesfn) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | if command is None: | ||
continue | ||||
ui.debug('subprocess: %s\n' % (command,)) | ||||
proc = subprocess.Popen( | ||||
Matt Harbison
|
r39868 | procutil.tonativestr(command), | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | shell=True, | ||
Matt Harbison
|
r39851 | cwd=procutil.tonativestr(b'/'), | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | stdin=subprocess.PIPE, | ||
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, | ||||
stderr=subprocess.PIPE) | ||||
newerdata, stderr = proc.communicate(newdata) | ||||
if stderr: | ||||
showstderr(ui, fixctx.rev(), fixername, stderr) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r39003 | if proc.returncode == 0: | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | newdata = newerdata | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r39003 | elif not stderr: | ||
showstderr(ui, fixctx.rev(), fixername, | ||||
_('exited with status %d\n') % (proc.returncode,)) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | return newdata | ||
def showstderr(ui, rev, fixername, stderr): | ||||
"""Writes the lines of the stderr string as warnings on the ui | ||||
Uses the revision number and fixername to give more context to each line of | ||||
the error message. Doesn't include file names, since those take up a lot of | ||||
space and would tend to be included in the error message if they were | ||||
relevant. | ||||
""" | ||||
for line in re.split('[\r\n]+', stderr): | ||||
if line: | ||||
ui.warn(('[')) | ||||
if rev is None: | ||||
ui.warn(_('wdir'), label='evolve.rev') | ||||
else: | ||||
ui.warn((str(rev)), label='evolve.rev') | ||||
ui.warn(('] %s: %s\n') % (fixername, line)) | ||||
def writeworkingdir(repo, ctx, filedata, replacements): | ||||
"""Write new content to the working copy and check out the new p1 if any | ||||
We check out a new revision if and only if we fixed something in both the | ||||
working directory and its parent revision. This avoids the need for a full | ||||
update/merge, and means that the working directory simply isn't affected | ||||
unless the --working-dir flag is given. | ||||
Directly updates the dirstate for the affected files. | ||||
""" | ||||
for path, data in filedata.iteritems(): | ||||
fctx = ctx[path] | ||||
fctx.write(data, fctx.flags()) | ||||
if repo.dirstate[path] == 'n': | ||||
repo.dirstate.normallookup(path) | ||||
oldparentnodes = repo.dirstate.parents() | ||||
newparentnodes = [replacements.get(n, n) for n in oldparentnodes] | ||||
if newparentnodes != oldparentnodes: | ||||
repo.setparents(*newparentnodes) | ||||
def replacerev(ui, repo, ctx, filedata, replacements): | ||||
"""Commit a new revision like the given one, but with file content changes | ||||
"ctx" is the original revision to be replaced by a modified one. | ||||
"filedata" is a dict that maps paths to their new file content. All other | ||||
paths will be recreated from the original revision without changes. | ||||
"filedata" may contain paths that didn't exist in the original revision; | ||||
they will be added. | ||||
"replacements" is a dict that maps a single node to a single node, and it is | ||||
updated to indicate the original revision is replaced by the newly created | ||||
one. No entry is added if the replacement's node already exists. | ||||
The new revision has the same parents as the old one, unless those parents | ||||
have already been replaced, in which case those replacements are the parents | ||||
of this new revision. Thus, if revisions are replaced in topological order, | ||||
there is no need to rebase them into the original topology later. | ||||
""" | ||||
p1rev, p2rev = repo.changelog.parentrevs(ctx.rev()) | ||||
p1ctx, p2ctx = repo[p1rev], repo[p2rev] | ||||
newp1node = replacements.get(p1ctx.node(), p1ctx.node()) | ||||
newp2node = replacements.get(p2ctx.node(), p2ctx.node()) | ||||
def filectxfn(repo, memctx, path): | ||||
if path not in ctx: | ||||
return None | ||||
fctx = ctx[path] | ||||
copied = fctx.renamed() | ||||
if copied: | ||||
copied = copied[0] | ||||
return context.memfilectx( | ||||
repo, | ||||
memctx, | ||||
path=fctx.path(), | ||||
data=filedata.get(path, fctx.data()), | ||||
islink=fctx.islink(), | ||||
isexec=fctx.isexec(), | ||||
copied=copied) | ||||
Martin von Zweigbergk
|
r38442 | memctx = context.memctx( | ||
repo, | ||||
parents=(newp1node, newp2node), | ||||
text=ctx.description(), | ||||
files=set(ctx.files()) | set(filedata.keys()), | ||||
filectxfn=filectxfn, | ||||
user=ctx.user(), | ||||
date=ctx.date(), | ||||
extra=ctx.extra(), | ||||
branch=ctx.branch(), | ||||
editor=None) | ||||
sucnode = memctx.commit() | ||||
prenode = ctx.node() | ||||
if prenode == sucnode: | ||||
ui.debug('node %s already existed\n' % (ctx.hex())) | ||||
else: | ||||
replacements[ctx.node()] = sucnode | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | |||
def getfixers(ui): | ||||
"""Returns a map of configured fixer tools indexed by their names | ||||
Each value is a Fixer object with methods that implement the behavior of the | ||||
fixer's config suboptions. Does not validate the config values. | ||||
""" | ||||
result = {} | ||||
for name in fixernames(ui): | ||||
result[name] = Fixer() | ||||
attrs = ui.configsuboptions('fix', name)[1] | ||||
for key in FIXER_ATTRS: | ||||
Augie Fackler
|
r37636 | setattr(result[name], pycompat.sysstr('_' + key), | ||
attrs.get(key, '')) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | return result | ||
def fixernames(ui): | ||||
"""Returns the names of [fix] config options that have suboptions""" | ||||
names = set() | ||||
for k, v in ui.configitems('fix'): | ||||
if ':' in k: | ||||
names.add(k.split(':', 1)[0]) | ||||
return names | ||||
class Fixer(object): | ||||
"""Wraps the raw config values for a fixer with methods""" | ||||
def affects(self, opts, fixctx, path): | ||||
"""Should this fixer run on the file at the given path and context?""" | ||||
return scmutil.match(fixctx, [self._fileset], opts)(path) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r38896 | def command(self, ui, path, rangesfn): | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | """A shell command to use to invoke this fixer on the given file/lines | ||
May return None if there is no appropriate command to run for the given | ||||
parameters. | ||||
""" | ||||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37792 | expand = cmdutil.rendercommandtemplate | ||
parts = [expand(ui, self._command, | ||||
{'rootpath': path, 'basename': os.path.basename(path)})] | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | if self._linerange: | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r38896 | ranges = rangesfn() | ||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | if not ranges: | ||
# No line ranges to fix, so don't run the fixer. | ||||
return None | ||||
for first, last in ranges: | ||||
Yuya Nishihara
|
r37792 | parts.append(expand(ui, self._linerange, | ||
{'first': first, 'last': last})) | ||||
Danny Hooper
|
r37200 | return ' '.join(parts) | ||