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hg qrecord -- like record, but for mq...
hg qrecord -- like record, but for mq I'm a former Darcs user, and I've discovered that it is very convenient to actually perform development using MQ first, and only when the patches are 'ready' move them to project's history in stone. Usually I work on some topic, temporarily forgetting about any version control, and just do coding, experimenting, debugging, etc. After some time, I approach a moment, where my work should actually go to patches/commits, and here is the problem:: As it is now, there is no way to put part of the changes into one patch, and another part of the changes into second patch. This works, but only when changes are touching separate files, and for semantically different changes touching the same file(s) there is now pretty way to put them into separate patches. For some time, I've tolerated the pain to run vim patches/... and move hunks between files by hand, but I think this affects my productivity badly. So, here is the first step towards untiing the problem: Let's use 'hg qrecord' for mq, like we use 'hg record' for usual commits!

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hook.py
96 lines | 3.5 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
Matt Mackall
hooks: separate hook code into a separate module
r4622 # hook.py - hook support for mercurial
#
# Copyright 2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms
# of the GNU General Public License, incorporated herein by reference.
from i18n import _
import util
def _pythonhook(ui, repo, name, hname, funcname, args, throw):
'''call python hook. hook is callable object, looked up as
name in python module. if callable returns "true", hook
fails, else passes. if hook raises exception, treated as
hook failure. exception propagates if throw is "true".
reason for "true" meaning "hook failed" is so that
unmodified commands (e.g. mercurial.commands.update) can
be run as hooks without wrappers to convert return values.'''
ui.note(_("calling hook %s: %s\n") % (hname, funcname))
obj = funcname
if not callable(obj):
d = funcname.rfind('.')
if d == -1:
raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid ("%s" not in '
'a module)') % (hname, funcname))
modname = funcname[:d]
try:
obj = __import__(modname)
except ImportError:
try:
# extensions are loaded with hgext_ prefix
obj = __import__("hgext_%s" % modname)
except ImportError:
raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid '
'(import of "%s" failed)') %
(hname, modname))
try:
for p in funcname.split('.')[1:]:
obj = getattr(obj, p)
except AttributeError, err:
raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid '
'("%s" is not defined)') %
(hname, funcname))
if not callable(obj):
raise util.Abort(_('%s hook is invalid '
'("%s" is not callable)') %
(hname, funcname))
try:
r = obj(ui=ui, repo=repo, hooktype=name, **args)
except (KeyboardInterrupt, util.SignalInterrupt):
raise
except Exception, exc:
if isinstance(exc, util.Abort):
ui.warn(_('error: %s hook failed: %s\n') %
(hname, exc.args[0]))
else:
ui.warn(_('error: %s hook raised an exception: '
'%s\n') % (hname, exc))
if throw:
raise
ui.print_exc()
return True
if r:
if throw:
raise util.Abort(_('%s hook failed') % hname)
ui.warn(_('warning: %s hook failed\n') % hname)
return r
def _exthook(ui, repo, name, cmd, args, throw):
ui.note(_("running hook %s: %s\n") % (name, cmd))
env = dict([('HG_' + k.upper(), v) for k, v in args.iteritems()])
r = util.system(cmd, environ=env, cwd=repo.root)
if r:
desc, r = util.explain_exit(r)
if throw:
raise util.Abort(_('%s hook %s') % (name, desc))
ui.warn(_('warning: %s hook %s\n') % (name, desc))
return r
def hook(ui, repo, name, throw=False, **args):
r = False
hooks = [(hname, cmd) for hname, cmd in ui.configitems("hooks")
if hname.split(".", 1)[0] == name and cmd]
hooks.sort()
for hname, cmd in hooks:
if callable(cmd):
r = _pythonhook(ui, repo, name, hname, cmd, args, throw) or r
elif cmd.startswith('python:'):
r = _pythonhook(ui, repo, name, hname, cmd[7:].strip(),
args, throw) or r
else:
r = _exthook(ui, repo, hname, cmd, args, throw) or r
return r