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@@ -1,871 +1,870 b'' | |||
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1 | 1 | # fix - rewrite file content in changesets and working copy |
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2 | 2 | # |
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3 | 3 | # Copyright 2018 Google LLC. |
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4 | 4 | # |
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5 | 5 | # This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the |
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6 | 6 | # GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version. |
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7 | 7 | """rewrite file content in changesets or working copy (EXPERIMENTAL) |
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8 | 8 | |
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9 | 9 | Provides a command that runs configured tools on the contents of modified files, |
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10 | 10 | writing back any fixes to the working copy or replacing changesets. |
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11 | 11 | |
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12 | 12 | Here is an example configuration that causes :hg:`fix` to apply automatic |
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13 | 13 | formatting fixes to modified lines in C++ code:: |
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14 | 14 | |
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15 | 15 | [fix] |
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16 | 16 | clang-format:command=clang-format --assume-filename={rootpath} |
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17 | 17 | clang-format:linerange=--lines={first}:{last} |
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18 | 18 | clang-format:pattern=set:**.cpp or **.hpp |
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19 | 19 | |
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20 | 20 | The :command suboption forms the first part of the shell command that will be |
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21 | 21 | used to fix a file. The content of the file is passed on standard input, and the |
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22 | 22 | fixed file content is expected on standard output. Any output on standard error |
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23 | 23 | will be displayed as a warning. If the exit status is not zero, the file will |
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24 | 24 | not be affected. A placeholder warning is displayed if there is a non-zero exit |
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25 | 25 | status but no standard error output. Some values may be substituted into the |
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26 | 26 | command:: |
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27 | 27 | |
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28 | 28 | {rootpath} The path of the file being fixed, relative to the repo root |
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29 | 29 | {basename} The name of the file being fixed, without the directory path |
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30 | 30 | |
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31 | 31 | If the :linerange suboption is set, the tool will only be run if there are |
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32 | 32 | changed lines in a file. The value of this suboption is appended to the shell |
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33 | 33 | command once for every range of changed lines in the file. Some values may be |
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34 | 34 | substituted into the command:: |
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35 | 35 | |
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36 | 36 | {first} The 1-based line number of the first line in the modified range |
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37 | 37 | {last} The 1-based line number of the last line in the modified range |
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38 | 38 | |
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39 | 39 | Deleted sections of a file will be ignored by :linerange, because there is no |
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40 | 40 | corresponding line range in the version being fixed. |
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41 | 41 | |
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42 | 42 | By default, tools that set :linerange will only be executed if there is at least |
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43 | 43 | one changed line range. This is meant to prevent accidents like running a code |
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44 | 44 | formatter in such a way that it unexpectedly reformats the whole file. If such a |
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45 | 45 | tool needs to operate on unchanged files, it should set the :skipclean suboption |
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46 | 46 | to false. |
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47 | 47 | |
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48 | 48 | The :pattern suboption determines which files will be passed through each |
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49 | 49 | configured tool. See :hg:`help patterns` for possible values. If there are file |
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50 | 50 | arguments to :hg:`fix`, the intersection of these patterns is used. |
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51 | 51 | |
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52 | 52 | There is also a configurable limit for the maximum size of file that will be |
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53 | 53 | processed by :hg:`fix`:: |
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54 | 54 | |
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55 | 55 | [fix] |
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56 | 56 | maxfilesize = 2MB |
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57 | 57 | |
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58 | 58 | Normally, execution of configured tools will continue after a failure (indicated |
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59 | 59 | by a non-zero exit status). It can also be configured to abort after the first |
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60 | 60 | such failure, so that no files will be affected if any tool fails. This abort |
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61 | 61 | will also cause :hg:`fix` to exit with a non-zero status:: |
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62 | 62 | |
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63 | 63 | [fix] |
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64 | 64 | failure = abort |
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65 | 65 | |
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66 | 66 | When multiple tools are configured to affect a file, they execute in an order |
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67 | 67 | defined by the :priority suboption. The priority suboption has a default value |
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68 | 68 | of zero for each tool. Tools are executed in order of descending priority. The |
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69 | 69 | execution order of tools with equal priority is unspecified. For example, you |
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70 | 70 | could use the 'sort' and 'head' utilities to keep only the 10 smallest numbers |
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71 | 71 | in a text file by ensuring that 'sort' runs before 'head':: |
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72 | 72 | |
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73 | 73 | [fix] |
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74 | 74 | sort:command = sort -n |
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75 | 75 | head:command = head -n 10 |
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76 | 76 | sort:pattern = numbers.txt |
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77 | 77 | head:pattern = numbers.txt |
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78 | 78 | sort:priority = 2 |
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79 | 79 | head:priority = 1 |
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80 | 80 | |
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81 | 81 | To account for changes made by each tool, the line numbers used for incremental |
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82 | 82 | formatting are recomputed before executing the next tool. So, each tool may see |
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83 | 83 | different values for the arguments added by the :linerange suboption. |
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84 | 84 | |
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85 | 85 | Each fixer tool is allowed to return some metadata in addition to the fixed file |
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86 | 86 | content. The metadata must be placed before the file content on stdout, |
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87 | 87 | separated from the file content by a zero byte. The metadata is parsed as a JSON |
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88 | 88 | value (so, it should be UTF-8 encoded and contain no zero bytes). A fixer tool |
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89 | 89 | is expected to produce this metadata encoding if and only if the :metadata |
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90 | 90 | suboption is true:: |
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91 | 91 | |
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92 | 92 | [fix] |
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93 | 93 | tool:command = tool --prepend-json-metadata |
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94 | 94 | tool:metadata = true |
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95 | 95 | |
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96 | 96 | The metadata values are passed to hooks, which can be used to print summaries or |
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97 | 97 | perform other post-fixing work. The supported hooks are:: |
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98 | 98 | |
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99 | 99 | "postfixfile" |
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100 | 100 | Run once for each file in each revision where any fixer tools made changes |
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101 | 101 | to the file content. Provides "$HG_REV" and "$HG_PATH" to identify the file, |
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102 | 102 | and "$HG_METADATA" with a map of fixer names to metadata values from fixer |
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103 | 103 | tools that affected the file. Fixer tools that didn't affect the file have a |
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104 | 104 | valueof None. Only fixer tools that executed are present in the metadata. |
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105 | 105 | |
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106 | 106 | "postfix" |
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107 | 107 | Run once after all files and revisions have been handled. Provides |
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108 | 108 | "$HG_REPLACEMENTS" with information about what revisions were created and |
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109 | 109 | made obsolete. Provides a boolean "$HG_WDIRWRITTEN" to indicate whether any |
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110 | 110 | files in the working copy were updated. Provides a list "$HG_METADATA" |
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111 | 111 | mapping fixer tool names to lists of metadata values returned from |
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112 | 112 | executions that modified a file. This aggregates the same metadata |
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113 | 113 | previously passed to the "postfixfile" hook. |
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114 | 114 | |
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115 | 115 | Fixer tools are run the in repository's root directory. This allows them to read |
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116 | 116 | configuration files from the working copy, or even write to the working copy. |
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117 | 117 | The working copy is not updated to match the revision being fixed. In fact, |
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118 | 118 | several revisions may be fixed in parallel. Writes to the working copy are not |
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119 | 119 | amended into the revision being fixed; fixer tools should always write fixed |
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120 | 120 | file content back to stdout as documented above. |
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121 | 121 | """ |
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122 | 122 | |
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123 | 123 | from __future__ import absolute_import |
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124 | 124 | |
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125 | 125 | import collections |
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126 | 126 | import itertools |
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127 | 127 | import json |
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128 | 128 | import os |
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129 | 129 | import re |
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130 | 130 | import subprocess |
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131 | 131 | |
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132 | 132 | from mercurial.i18n import _ |
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133 | 133 | from mercurial.node import nullrev |
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134 | 134 | from mercurial.node import wdirrev |
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135 | 135 | from mercurial.pycompat import setattr |
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136 | 136 | |
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137 | 137 | from mercurial.utils import ( |
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138 | 138 | procutil, |
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139 | 139 | stringutil, |
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140 | 140 | ) |
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141 | 141 | |
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142 | 142 | from mercurial import ( |
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143 | 143 | cmdutil, |
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144 | 144 | context, |
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145 | 145 | copies, |
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146 | 146 | error, |
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147 | 147 | mdiff, |
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148 | 148 | merge, |
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149 | 149 | obsolete, |
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150 | 150 | pycompat, |
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151 | 151 | registrar, |
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152 | 152 | scmutil, |
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153 | 153 | util, |
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154 | 154 | worker, |
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155 | 155 | ) |
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156 | 156 | |
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157 | 157 | # Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for |
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158 | 158 | # extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should |
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159 | 159 | # be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or |
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160 | 160 | # leave the attribute unspecified. |
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161 | 161 | testedwith = b'ships-with-hg-core' |
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162 | 162 | |
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163 | 163 | cmdtable = {} |
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164 | 164 | command = registrar.command(cmdtable) |
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165 | 165 | |
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166 | 166 | configtable = {} |
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167 | 167 | configitem = registrar.configitem(configtable) |
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168 | 168 | |
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169 | 169 | # Register the suboptions allowed for each configured fixer, and default values. |
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170 | 170 | FIXER_ATTRS = { |
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171 | 171 | b'command': None, |
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172 | 172 | b'linerange': None, |
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173 | 173 | b'pattern': None, |
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174 | 174 | b'priority': 0, |
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175 | 175 | b'metadata': b'false', |
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176 | 176 | b'skipclean': b'true', |
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177 | 177 | b'enabled': b'true', |
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178 | 178 | } |
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179 | 179 | |
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180 | 180 | for key, default in FIXER_ATTRS.items(): |
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181 |
configitem(b'fix', b'.* |
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181 | configitem(b'fix', b'.*:%s$' % key, default=default, generic=True) | |
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182 | 182 | |
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183 | 183 | # A good default size allows most source code files to be fixed, but avoids |
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184 | 184 | # letting fixer tools choke on huge inputs, which could be surprising to the |
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185 | 185 | # user. |
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186 | 186 | configitem(b'fix', b'maxfilesize', default=b'2MB') |
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187 | 187 | |
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188 | 188 | # Allow fix commands to exit non-zero if an executed fixer tool exits non-zero. |
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189 | 189 | # This helps users do shell scripts that stop when a fixer tool signals a |
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190 | 190 | # problem. |
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191 | 191 | configitem(b'fix', b'failure', default=b'continue') |
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192 | 192 | |
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193 | 193 | |
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194 | 194 | def checktoolfailureaction(ui, message, hint=None): |
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195 | 195 | """Abort with 'message' if fix.failure=abort""" |
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196 | 196 | action = ui.config(b'fix', b'failure') |
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197 | 197 | if action not in (b'continue', b'abort'): |
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198 | 198 | raise error.Abort( |
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199 | 199 | _(b'unknown fix.failure action: %s') % (action,), |
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200 | 200 | hint=_(b'use "continue" or "abort"'), |
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201 | 201 | ) |
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202 | 202 | if action == b'abort': |
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203 | 203 | raise error.Abort(message, hint=hint) |
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204 | 204 | |
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205 | 205 | |
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206 | 206 | allopt = (b'', b'all', False, _(b'fix all non-public non-obsolete revisions')) |
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207 | 207 | baseopt = ( |
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208 | 208 | b'', |
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209 | 209 | b'base', |
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210 | 210 | [], |
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211 | 211 | _( |
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212 | 212 | b'revisions to diff against (overrides automatic ' |
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213 | 213 | b'selection, and applies to every revision being ' |
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214 | 214 | b'fixed)' |
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215 | 215 | ), |
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216 | 216 | _(b'REV'), |
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217 | 217 | ) |
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218 | 218 | revopt = (b'r', b'rev', [], _(b'revisions to fix'), _(b'REV')) |
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219 | 219 | wdiropt = (b'w', b'working-dir', False, _(b'fix the working directory')) |
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220 | 220 | wholeopt = (b'', b'whole', False, _(b'always fix every line of a file')) |
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221 | 221 | usage = _(b'[OPTION]... [FILE]...') |
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222 | 222 | |
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223 | 223 | |
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224 | 224 | @command( |
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225 | 225 | b'fix', |
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226 | 226 | [allopt, baseopt, revopt, wdiropt, wholeopt], |
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227 | 227 | usage, |
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228 | 228 | helpcategory=command.CATEGORY_FILE_CONTENTS, |
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229 | 229 | ) |
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230 | 230 | def fix(ui, repo, *pats, **opts): |
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231 | 231 | """rewrite file content in changesets or working directory |
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232 | 232 | |
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233 | 233 | Runs any configured tools to fix the content of files. Only affects files |
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234 | 234 | with changes, unless file arguments are provided. Only affects changed lines |
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235 | 235 | of files, unless the --whole flag is used. Some tools may always affect the |
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236 | 236 | whole file regardless of --whole. |
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237 | 237 | |
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238 | 238 | If revisions are specified with --rev, those revisions will be checked, and |
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239 | 239 | they may be replaced with new revisions that have fixed file content. It is |
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240 | 240 | desirable to specify all descendants of each specified revision, so that the |
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241 | 241 | fixes propagate to the descendants. If all descendants are fixed at the same |
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242 | 242 | time, no merging, rebasing, or evolution will be required. |
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243 | 243 | |
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244 | 244 | If --working-dir is used, files with uncommitted changes in the working copy |
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245 | 245 | will be fixed. If the checked-out revision is also fixed, the working |
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246 | 246 | directory will update to the replacement revision. |
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247 | 247 | |
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248 | 248 | When determining what lines of each file to fix at each revision, the whole |
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249 | 249 | set of revisions being fixed is considered, so that fixes to earlier |
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250 | 250 | revisions are not forgotten in later ones. The --base flag can be used to |
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251 | 251 | override this default behavior, though it is not usually desirable to do so. |
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252 | 252 | """ |
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253 | 253 | opts = pycompat.byteskwargs(opts) |
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254 | 254 | if opts[b'all']: |
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255 | 255 | if opts[b'rev']: |
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256 | 256 | raise error.Abort(_(b'cannot specify both "--rev" and "--all"')) |
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257 | 257 | opts[b'rev'] = [b'not public() and not obsolete()'] |
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258 | 258 | opts[b'working_dir'] = True |
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259 | 259 | with repo.wlock(), repo.lock(), repo.transaction(b'fix'): |
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260 | 260 | revstofix = getrevstofix(ui, repo, opts) |
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261 | 261 | basectxs = getbasectxs(repo, opts, revstofix) |
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262 | 262 | workqueue, numitems = getworkqueue( |
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263 | 263 | ui, repo, pats, opts, revstofix, basectxs |
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264 | 264 | ) |
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265 | 265 | fixers = getfixers(ui) |
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266 | 266 | |
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267 | 267 | # There are no data dependencies between the workers fixing each file |
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268 | 268 | # revision, so we can use all available parallelism. |
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269 | 269 | def getfixes(items): |
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270 | 270 | for rev, path in items: |
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271 | 271 | ctx = repo[rev] |
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272 | 272 | olddata = ctx[path].data() |
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273 | 273 | metadata, newdata = fixfile( |
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274 | 274 | ui, repo, opts, fixers, ctx, path, basectxs[rev] |
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275 | 275 | ) |
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276 | 276 | # Don't waste memory/time passing unchanged content back, but |
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277 | 277 | # produce one result per item either way. |
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278 | 278 | yield ( |
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279 | 279 | rev, |
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280 | 280 | path, |
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281 | 281 | metadata, |
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282 | 282 | newdata if newdata != olddata else None, |
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283 | 283 | ) |
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284 | 284 | |
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285 | 285 | results = worker.worker( |
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286 | 286 | ui, 1.0, getfixes, tuple(), workqueue, threadsafe=False |
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287 | 287 | ) |
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288 | 288 | |
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289 | 289 | # We have to hold on to the data for each successor revision in memory |
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290 | 290 | # until all its parents are committed. We ensure this by committing and |
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291 | 291 | # freeing memory for the revisions in some topological order. This |
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292 | 292 | # leaves a little bit of memory efficiency on the table, but also makes |
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293 | 293 | # the tests deterministic. It might also be considered a feature since |
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294 | 294 | # it makes the results more easily reproducible. |
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295 | 295 | filedata = collections.defaultdict(dict) |
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296 | 296 | aggregatemetadata = collections.defaultdict(list) |
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297 | 297 | replacements = {} |
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298 | 298 | wdirwritten = False |
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299 | 299 | commitorder = sorted(revstofix, reverse=True) |
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300 | 300 | with ui.makeprogress( |
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301 | 301 | topic=_(b'fixing'), unit=_(b'files'), total=sum(numitems.values()) |
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302 | 302 | ) as progress: |
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303 | 303 | for rev, path, filerevmetadata, newdata in results: |
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304 | 304 | progress.increment(item=path) |
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305 | 305 | for fixername, fixermetadata in filerevmetadata.items(): |
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306 | 306 | aggregatemetadata[fixername].append(fixermetadata) |
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307 | 307 | if newdata is not None: |
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308 | 308 | filedata[rev][path] = newdata |
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309 | 309 | hookargs = { |
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310 | 310 | b'rev': rev, |
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311 | 311 | b'path': path, |
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312 | 312 | b'metadata': filerevmetadata, |
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313 | 313 | } |
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314 | 314 | repo.hook( |
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315 | 315 | b'postfixfile', |
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316 | 316 | throw=False, |
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317 | 317 | **pycompat.strkwargs(hookargs) |
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318 | 318 | ) |
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319 | 319 | numitems[rev] -= 1 |
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320 | 320 | # Apply the fixes for this and any other revisions that are |
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321 | 321 | # ready and sitting at the front of the queue. Using a loop here |
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322 | 322 | # prevents the queue from being blocked by the first revision to |
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323 | 323 | # be ready out of order. |
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324 | 324 | while commitorder and not numitems[commitorder[-1]]: |
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325 | 325 | rev = commitorder.pop() |
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326 | 326 | ctx = repo[rev] |
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327 | 327 | if rev == wdirrev: |
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328 | 328 | writeworkingdir(repo, ctx, filedata[rev], replacements) |
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329 | 329 | wdirwritten = bool(filedata[rev]) |
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330 | 330 | else: |
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331 | 331 | replacerev(ui, repo, ctx, filedata[rev], replacements) |
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332 | 332 | del filedata[rev] |
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333 | 333 | |
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334 | 334 | cleanup(repo, replacements, wdirwritten) |
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335 | 335 | hookargs = { |
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336 | 336 | b'replacements': replacements, |
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337 | 337 | b'wdirwritten': wdirwritten, |
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338 | 338 | b'metadata': aggregatemetadata, |
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339 | 339 | } |
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340 | 340 | repo.hook(b'postfix', throw=True, **pycompat.strkwargs(hookargs)) |
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341 | 341 | |
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342 | 342 | |
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343 | 343 | def cleanup(repo, replacements, wdirwritten): |
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344 | 344 | """Calls scmutil.cleanupnodes() with the given replacements. |
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345 | 345 | |
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346 | 346 | "replacements" is a dict from nodeid to nodeid, with one key and one value |
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347 | 347 | for every revision that was affected by fixing. This is slightly different |
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348 | 348 | from cleanupnodes(). |
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349 | 349 | |
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350 | 350 | "wdirwritten" is a bool which tells whether the working copy was affected by |
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351 | 351 | fixing, since it has no entry in "replacements". |
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352 | 352 | |
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353 | 353 | Useful as a hook point for extending "hg fix" with output summarizing the |
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354 | 354 | effects of the command, though we choose not to output anything here. |
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355 | 355 | """ |
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356 | 356 | replacements = { |
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357 | 357 | prec: [succ] for prec, succ in pycompat.iteritems(replacements) |
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358 | 358 | } |
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359 | 359 | scmutil.cleanupnodes(repo, replacements, b'fix', fixphase=True) |
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360 | 360 | |
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361 | 361 | |
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362 | 362 | def getworkqueue(ui, repo, pats, opts, revstofix, basectxs): |
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363 | 363 | """"Constructs the list of files to be fixed at specific revisions |
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364 | 364 | |
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365 | 365 | It is up to the caller how to consume the work items, and the only |
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366 | 366 | dependence between them is that replacement revisions must be committed in |
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367 | 367 | topological order. Each work item represents a file in the working copy or |
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368 | 368 | in some revision that should be fixed and written back to the working copy |
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369 | 369 | or into a replacement revision. |
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370 | 370 | |
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371 | 371 | Work items for the same revision are grouped together, so that a worker |
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372 | 372 | pool starting with the first N items in parallel is likely to finish the |
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373 | 373 | first revision's work before other revisions. This can allow us to write |
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374 | 374 | the result to disk and reduce memory footprint. At time of writing, the |
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375 | 375 | partition strategy in worker.py seems favorable to this. We also sort the |
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376 | 376 | items by ascending revision number to match the order in which we commit |
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377 | 377 | the fixes later. |
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378 | 378 | """ |
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379 | 379 | workqueue = [] |
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380 | 380 | numitems = collections.defaultdict(int) |
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381 | 381 | maxfilesize = ui.configbytes(b'fix', b'maxfilesize') |
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382 | 382 | for rev in sorted(revstofix): |
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383 | 383 | fixctx = repo[rev] |
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384 | 384 | match = scmutil.match(fixctx, pats, opts) |
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385 | 385 | for path in sorted( |
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386 | 386 | pathstofix(ui, repo, pats, opts, match, basectxs[rev], fixctx) |
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387 | 387 | ): |
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388 | 388 | fctx = fixctx[path] |
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389 | 389 | if fctx.islink(): |
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390 | 390 | continue |
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391 | 391 | if fctx.size() > maxfilesize: |
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392 | 392 | ui.warn( |
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393 | 393 | _(b'ignoring file larger than %s: %s\n') |
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394 | 394 | % (util.bytecount(maxfilesize), path) |
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395 | 395 | ) |
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396 | 396 | continue |
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397 | 397 | workqueue.append((rev, path)) |
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398 | 398 | numitems[rev] += 1 |
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399 | 399 | return workqueue, numitems |
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400 | 400 | |
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401 | 401 | |
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402 | 402 | def getrevstofix(ui, repo, opts): |
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403 | 403 | """Returns the set of revision numbers that should be fixed""" |
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404 | 404 | revs = set(scmutil.revrange(repo, opts[b'rev'])) |
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405 | 405 | for rev in revs: |
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406 | 406 | checkfixablectx(ui, repo, repo[rev]) |
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407 | 407 | if revs: |
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408 | 408 | cmdutil.checkunfinished(repo) |
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409 | 409 | checknodescendants(repo, revs) |
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410 | 410 | if opts.get(b'working_dir'): |
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411 | 411 | revs.add(wdirrev) |
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412 | 412 | if list(merge.mergestate.read(repo).unresolved()): |
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413 | 413 | raise error.Abort(b'unresolved conflicts', hint=b"use 'hg resolve'") |
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414 | 414 | if not revs: |
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415 | 415 | raise error.Abort( |
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416 | 416 | b'no changesets specified', hint=b'use --rev or --working-dir' |
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417 | 417 | ) |
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418 | 418 | return revs |
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419 | 419 | |
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420 | 420 | |
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421 | 421 | def checknodescendants(repo, revs): |
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422 | 422 | if not obsolete.isenabled(repo, obsolete.allowunstableopt) and repo.revs( |
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423 | 423 | b'(%ld::) - (%ld)', revs, revs |
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424 | 424 | ): |
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425 | 425 | raise error.Abort( |
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426 | 426 | _(b'can only fix a changeset together with all its descendants') |
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427 | 427 | ) |
|
428 | 428 | |
|
429 | 429 | |
|
430 | 430 | def checkfixablectx(ui, repo, ctx): |
|
431 | 431 | """Aborts if the revision shouldn't be replaced with a fixed one.""" |
|
432 | 432 | if not ctx.mutable(): |
|
433 | 433 | raise error.Abort( |
|
434 | 434 | b'can\'t fix immutable changeset %s' |
|
435 | 435 | % (scmutil.formatchangeid(ctx),) |
|
436 | 436 | ) |
|
437 | 437 | if ctx.obsolete(): |
|
438 | 438 | # It would be better to actually check if the revision has a successor. |
|
439 | 439 | allowdivergence = ui.configbool( |
|
440 | 440 | b'experimental', b'evolution.allowdivergence' |
|
441 | 441 | ) |
|
442 | 442 | if not allowdivergence: |
|
443 | 443 | raise error.Abort( |
|
444 | 444 | b'fixing obsolete revision could cause divergence' |
|
445 | 445 | ) |
|
446 | 446 | |
|
447 | 447 | |
|
448 | 448 | def pathstofix(ui, repo, pats, opts, match, basectxs, fixctx): |
|
449 | 449 | """Returns the set of files that should be fixed in a context |
|
450 | 450 | |
|
451 | 451 | The result depends on the base contexts; we include any file that has |
|
452 | 452 | changed relative to any of the base contexts. Base contexts should be |
|
453 | 453 | ancestors of the context being fixed. |
|
454 | 454 | """ |
|
455 | 455 | files = set() |
|
456 | 456 | for basectx in basectxs: |
|
457 | 457 | stat = basectx.status( |
|
458 | 458 | fixctx, match=match, listclean=bool(pats), listunknown=bool(pats) |
|
459 | 459 | ) |
|
460 | 460 | files.update( |
|
461 | 461 | set( |
|
462 | 462 | itertools.chain( |
|
463 | 463 | stat.added, stat.modified, stat.clean, stat.unknown |
|
464 | 464 | ) |
|
465 | 465 | ) |
|
466 | 466 | ) |
|
467 | 467 | return files |
|
468 | 468 | |
|
469 | 469 | |
|
470 | 470 | def lineranges(opts, path, basectxs, fixctx, content2): |
|
471 | 471 | """Returns the set of line ranges that should be fixed in a file |
|
472 | 472 | |
|
473 | 473 | Of the form [(10, 20), (30, 40)]. |
|
474 | 474 | |
|
475 | 475 | This depends on the given base contexts; we must consider lines that have |
|
476 | 476 | changed versus any of the base contexts, and whether the file has been |
|
477 | 477 | renamed versus any of them. |
|
478 | 478 | |
|
479 | 479 | Another way to understand this is that we exclude line ranges that are |
|
480 | 480 | common to the file in all base contexts. |
|
481 | 481 | """ |
|
482 | 482 | if opts.get(b'whole'): |
|
483 | 483 | # Return a range containing all lines. Rely on the diff implementation's |
|
484 | 484 | # idea of how many lines are in the file, instead of reimplementing it. |
|
485 | 485 | return difflineranges(b'', content2) |
|
486 | 486 | |
|
487 | 487 | rangeslist = [] |
|
488 | 488 | for basectx in basectxs: |
|
489 | 489 | basepath = copies.pathcopies(basectx, fixctx).get(path, path) |
|
490 | 490 | if basepath in basectx: |
|
491 | 491 | content1 = basectx[basepath].data() |
|
492 | 492 | else: |
|
493 | 493 | content1 = b'' |
|
494 | 494 | rangeslist.extend(difflineranges(content1, content2)) |
|
495 | 495 | return unionranges(rangeslist) |
|
496 | 496 | |
|
497 | 497 | |
|
498 | 498 | def unionranges(rangeslist): |
|
499 | 499 | """Return the union of some closed intervals |
|
500 | 500 | |
|
501 | 501 | >>> unionranges([]) |
|
502 | 502 | [] |
|
503 | 503 | >>> unionranges([(1, 100)]) |
|
504 | 504 | [(1, 100)] |
|
505 | 505 | >>> unionranges([(1, 100), (1, 100)]) |
|
506 | 506 | [(1, 100)] |
|
507 | 507 | >>> unionranges([(1, 100), (2, 100)]) |
|
508 | 508 | [(1, 100)] |
|
509 | 509 | >>> unionranges([(1, 99), (1, 100)]) |
|
510 | 510 | [(1, 100)] |
|
511 | 511 | >>> unionranges([(1, 100), (40, 60)]) |
|
512 | 512 | [(1, 100)] |
|
513 | 513 | >>> unionranges([(1, 49), (50, 100)]) |
|
514 | 514 | [(1, 100)] |
|
515 | 515 | >>> unionranges([(1, 48), (50, 100)]) |
|
516 | 516 | [(1, 48), (50, 100)] |
|
517 | 517 | >>> unionranges([(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)]) |
|
518 | 518 | [(1, 6)] |
|
519 | 519 | """ |
|
520 | 520 | rangeslist = sorted(set(rangeslist)) |
|
521 | 521 | unioned = [] |
|
522 | 522 | if rangeslist: |
|
523 | 523 | unioned, rangeslist = [rangeslist[0]], rangeslist[1:] |
|
524 | 524 | for a, b in rangeslist: |
|
525 | 525 | c, d = unioned[-1] |
|
526 | 526 | if a > d + 1: |
|
527 | 527 | unioned.append((a, b)) |
|
528 | 528 | else: |
|
529 | 529 | unioned[-1] = (c, max(b, d)) |
|
530 | 530 | return unioned |
|
531 | 531 | |
|
532 | 532 | |
|
533 | 533 | def difflineranges(content1, content2): |
|
534 | 534 | """Return list of line number ranges in content2 that differ from content1. |
|
535 | 535 | |
|
536 | 536 | Line numbers are 1-based. The numbers are the first and last line contained |
|
537 | 537 | in the range. Single-line ranges have the same line number for the first and |
|
538 | 538 | last line. Excludes any empty ranges that result from lines that are only |
|
539 | 539 | present in content1. Relies on mdiff's idea of where the line endings are in |
|
540 | 540 | the string. |
|
541 | 541 | |
|
542 | 542 | >>> from mercurial import pycompat |
|
543 | 543 | >>> lines = lambda s: b'\\n'.join([c for c in pycompat.iterbytestr(s)]) |
|
544 | 544 | >>> difflineranges2 = lambda a, b: difflineranges(lines(a), lines(b)) |
|
545 | 545 | >>> difflineranges2(b'', b'') |
|
546 | 546 | [] |
|
547 | 547 | >>> difflineranges2(b'a', b'') |
|
548 | 548 | [] |
|
549 | 549 | >>> difflineranges2(b'', b'A') |
|
550 | 550 | [(1, 1)] |
|
551 | 551 | >>> difflineranges2(b'a', b'a') |
|
552 | 552 | [] |
|
553 | 553 | >>> difflineranges2(b'a', b'A') |
|
554 | 554 | [(1, 1)] |
|
555 | 555 | >>> difflineranges2(b'ab', b'') |
|
556 | 556 | [] |
|
557 | 557 | >>> difflineranges2(b'', b'AB') |
|
558 | 558 | [(1, 2)] |
|
559 | 559 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abc', b'ac') |
|
560 | 560 | [] |
|
561 | 561 | >>> difflineranges2(b'ab', b'aCb') |
|
562 | 562 | [(2, 2)] |
|
563 | 563 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abc', b'aBc') |
|
564 | 564 | [(2, 2)] |
|
565 | 565 | >>> difflineranges2(b'ab', b'AB') |
|
566 | 566 | [(1, 2)] |
|
567 | 567 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abcde', b'aBcDe') |
|
568 | 568 | [(2, 2), (4, 4)] |
|
569 | 569 | >>> difflineranges2(b'abcde', b'aBCDe') |
|
570 | 570 | [(2, 4)] |
|
571 | 571 | """ |
|
572 | 572 | ranges = [] |
|
573 | 573 | for lines, kind in mdiff.allblocks(content1, content2): |
|
574 | 574 | firstline, lastline = lines[2:4] |
|
575 | 575 | if kind == b'!' and firstline != lastline: |
|
576 | 576 | ranges.append((firstline + 1, lastline)) |
|
577 | 577 | return ranges |
|
578 | 578 | |
|
579 | 579 | |
|
580 | 580 | def getbasectxs(repo, opts, revstofix): |
|
581 | 581 | """Returns a map of the base contexts for each revision |
|
582 | 582 | |
|
583 | 583 | The base contexts determine which lines are considered modified when we |
|
584 | 584 | attempt to fix just the modified lines in a file. It also determines which |
|
585 | 585 | files we attempt to fix, so it is important to compute this even when |
|
586 | 586 | --whole is used. |
|
587 | 587 | """ |
|
588 | 588 | # The --base flag overrides the usual logic, and we give every revision |
|
589 | 589 | # exactly the set of baserevs that the user specified. |
|
590 | 590 | if opts.get(b'base'): |
|
591 | 591 | baserevs = set(scmutil.revrange(repo, opts.get(b'base'))) |
|
592 | 592 | if not baserevs: |
|
593 | 593 | baserevs = {nullrev} |
|
594 | 594 | basectxs = {repo[rev] for rev in baserevs} |
|
595 | 595 | return {rev: basectxs for rev in revstofix} |
|
596 | 596 | |
|
597 | 597 | # Proceed in topological order so that we can easily determine each |
|
598 | 598 | # revision's baserevs by looking at its parents and their baserevs. |
|
599 | 599 | basectxs = collections.defaultdict(set) |
|
600 | 600 | for rev in sorted(revstofix): |
|
601 | 601 | ctx = repo[rev] |
|
602 | 602 | for pctx in ctx.parents(): |
|
603 | 603 | if pctx.rev() in basectxs: |
|
604 | 604 | basectxs[rev].update(basectxs[pctx.rev()]) |
|
605 | 605 | else: |
|
606 | 606 | basectxs[rev].add(pctx) |
|
607 | 607 | return basectxs |
|
608 | 608 | |
|
609 | 609 | |
|
610 | 610 | def fixfile(ui, repo, opts, fixers, fixctx, path, basectxs): |
|
611 | 611 | """Run any configured fixers that should affect the file in this context |
|
612 | 612 | |
|
613 | 613 | Returns the file content that results from applying the fixers in some order |
|
614 | 614 | starting with the file's content in the fixctx. Fixers that support line |
|
615 | 615 | ranges will affect lines that have changed relative to any of the basectxs |
|
616 | 616 | (i.e. they will only avoid lines that are common to all basectxs). |
|
617 | 617 | |
|
618 | 618 | A fixer tool's stdout will become the file's new content if and only if it |
|
619 | 619 | exits with code zero. The fixer tool's working directory is the repository's |
|
620 | 620 | root. |
|
621 | 621 | """ |
|
622 | 622 | metadata = {} |
|
623 | 623 | newdata = fixctx[path].data() |
|
624 | 624 | for fixername, fixer in pycompat.iteritems(fixers): |
|
625 | 625 | if fixer.affects(opts, fixctx, path): |
|
626 | 626 | ranges = lineranges(opts, path, basectxs, fixctx, newdata) |
|
627 | 627 | command = fixer.command(ui, path, ranges) |
|
628 | 628 | if command is None: |
|
629 | 629 | continue |
|
630 | 630 | ui.debug(b'subprocess: %s\n' % (command,)) |
|
631 | 631 | proc = subprocess.Popen( |
|
632 | 632 | procutil.tonativestr(command), |
|
633 | 633 | shell=True, |
|
634 | 634 | cwd=procutil.tonativestr(repo.root), |
|
635 | 635 | stdin=subprocess.PIPE, |
|
636 | 636 | stdout=subprocess.PIPE, |
|
637 | 637 | stderr=subprocess.PIPE, |
|
638 | 638 | ) |
|
639 | 639 | stdout, stderr = proc.communicate(newdata) |
|
640 | 640 | if stderr: |
|
641 | 641 | showstderr(ui, fixctx.rev(), fixername, stderr) |
|
642 | 642 | newerdata = stdout |
|
643 | 643 | if fixer.shouldoutputmetadata(): |
|
644 | 644 | try: |
|
645 | 645 | metadatajson, newerdata = stdout.split(b'\0', 1) |
|
646 | 646 | metadata[fixername] = json.loads(metadatajson) |
|
647 | 647 | except ValueError: |
|
648 | 648 | ui.warn( |
|
649 | 649 | _(b'ignored invalid output from fixer tool: %s\n') |
|
650 | 650 | % (fixername,) |
|
651 | 651 | ) |
|
652 | 652 | continue |
|
653 | 653 | else: |
|
654 | 654 | metadata[fixername] = None |
|
655 | 655 | if proc.returncode == 0: |
|
656 | 656 | newdata = newerdata |
|
657 | 657 | else: |
|
658 | 658 | if not stderr: |
|
659 | 659 | message = _(b'exited with status %d\n') % (proc.returncode,) |
|
660 | 660 | showstderr(ui, fixctx.rev(), fixername, message) |
|
661 | 661 | checktoolfailureaction( |
|
662 | 662 | ui, |
|
663 | 663 | _(b'no fixes will be applied'), |
|
664 | 664 | hint=_( |
|
665 | 665 | b'use --config fix.failure=continue to apply any ' |
|
666 | 666 | b'successful fixes anyway' |
|
667 | 667 | ), |
|
668 | 668 | ) |
|
669 | 669 | return metadata, newdata |
|
670 | 670 | |
|
671 | 671 | |
|
672 | 672 | def showstderr(ui, rev, fixername, stderr): |
|
673 | 673 | """Writes the lines of the stderr string as warnings on the ui |
|
674 | 674 | |
|
675 | 675 | Uses the revision number and fixername to give more context to each line of |
|
676 | 676 | the error message. Doesn't include file names, since those take up a lot of |
|
677 | 677 | space and would tend to be included in the error message if they were |
|
678 | 678 | relevant. |
|
679 | 679 | """ |
|
680 | 680 | for line in re.split(b'[\r\n]+', stderr): |
|
681 | 681 | if line: |
|
682 | 682 | ui.warn(b'[') |
|
683 | 683 | if rev is None: |
|
684 | 684 | ui.warn(_(b'wdir'), label=b'evolve.rev') |
|
685 | 685 | else: |
|
686 | 686 | ui.warn((str(rev)), label=b'evolve.rev') |
|
687 | 687 | ui.warn(b'] %s: %s\n' % (fixername, line)) |
|
688 | 688 | |
|
689 | 689 | |
|
690 | 690 | def writeworkingdir(repo, ctx, filedata, replacements): |
|
691 | 691 | """Write new content to the working copy and check out the new p1 if any |
|
692 | 692 | |
|
693 | 693 | We check out a new revision if and only if we fixed something in both the |
|
694 | 694 | working directory and its parent revision. This avoids the need for a full |
|
695 | 695 | update/merge, and means that the working directory simply isn't affected |
|
696 | 696 | unless the --working-dir flag is given. |
|
697 | 697 | |
|
698 | 698 | Directly updates the dirstate for the affected files. |
|
699 | 699 | """ |
|
700 | 700 | for path, data in pycompat.iteritems(filedata): |
|
701 | 701 | fctx = ctx[path] |
|
702 | 702 | fctx.write(data, fctx.flags()) |
|
703 | 703 | if repo.dirstate[path] == b'n': |
|
704 | 704 | repo.dirstate.normallookup(path) |
|
705 | 705 | |
|
706 | 706 | oldparentnodes = repo.dirstate.parents() |
|
707 | 707 | newparentnodes = [replacements.get(n, n) for n in oldparentnodes] |
|
708 | 708 | if newparentnodes != oldparentnodes: |
|
709 | 709 | repo.setparents(*newparentnodes) |
|
710 | 710 | |
|
711 | 711 | |
|
712 | 712 | def replacerev(ui, repo, ctx, filedata, replacements): |
|
713 | 713 | """Commit a new revision like the given one, but with file content changes |
|
714 | 714 | |
|
715 | 715 | "ctx" is the original revision to be replaced by a modified one. |
|
716 | 716 | |
|
717 | 717 | "filedata" is a dict that maps paths to their new file content. All other |
|
718 | 718 | paths will be recreated from the original revision without changes. |
|
719 | 719 | "filedata" may contain paths that didn't exist in the original revision; |
|
720 | 720 | they will be added. |
|
721 | 721 | |
|
722 | 722 | "replacements" is a dict that maps a single node to a single node, and it is |
|
723 | 723 | updated to indicate the original revision is replaced by the newly created |
|
724 | 724 | one. No entry is added if the replacement's node already exists. |
|
725 | 725 | |
|
726 | 726 | The new revision has the same parents as the old one, unless those parents |
|
727 | 727 | have already been replaced, in which case those replacements are the parents |
|
728 | 728 | of this new revision. Thus, if revisions are replaced in topological order, |
|
729 | 729 | there is no need to rebase them into the original topology later. |
|
730 | 730 | """ |
|
731 | 731 | |
|
732 | 732 | p1rev, p2rev = repo.changelog.parentrevs(ctx.rev()) |
|
733 | 733 | p1ctx, p2ctx = repo[p1rev], repo[p2rev] |
|
734 | 734 | newp1node = replacements.get(p1ctx.node(), p1ctx.node()) |
|
735 | 735 | newp2node = replacements.get(p2ctx.node(), p2ctx.node()) |
|
736 | 736 | |
|
737 | 737 | # We don't want to create a revision that has no changes from the original, |
|
738 | 738 | # but we should if the original revision's parent has been replaced. |
|
739 | 739 | # Otherwise, we would produce an orphan that needs no actual human |
|
740 | 740 | # intervention to evolve. We can't rely on commit() to avoid creating the |
|
741 | 741 | # un-needed revision because the extra field added below produces a new hash |
|
742 | 742 | # regardless of file content changes. |
|
743 | 743 | if ( |
|
744 | 744 | not filedata |
|
745 | 745 | and p1ctx.node() not in replacements |
|
746 | 746 | and p2ctx.node() not in replacements |
|
747 | 747 | ): |
|
748 | 748 | return |
|
749 | 749 | |
|
750 | 750 | def filectxfn(repo, memctx, path): |
|
751 | 751 | if path not in ctx: |
|
752 | 752 | return None |
|
753 | 753 | fctx = ctx[path] |
|
754 | 754 | copysource = fctx.copysource() |
|
755 | 755 | return context.memfilectx( |
|
756 | 756 | repo, |
|
757 | 757 | memctx, |
|
758 | 758 | path=fctx.path(), |
|
759 | 759 | data=filedata.get(path, fctx.data()), |
|
760 | 760 | islink=fctx.islink(), |
|
761 | 761 | isexec=fctx.isexec(), |
|
762 | 762 | copysource=copysource, |
|
763 | 763 | ) |
|
764 | 764 | |
|
765 | 765 | extra = ctx.extra().copy() |
|
766 | 766 | extra[b'fix_source'] = ctx.hex() |
|
767 | 767 | |
|
768 | 768 | memctx = context.memctx( |
|
769 | 769 | repo, |
|
770 | 770 | parents=(newp1node, newp2node), |
|
771 | 771 | text=ctx.description(), |
|
772 | 772 | files=set(ctx.files()) | set(filedata.keys()), |
|
773 | 773 | filectxfn=filectxfn, |
|
774 | 774 | user=ctx.user(), |
|
775 | 775 | date=ctx.date(), |
|
776 | 776 | extra=extra, |
|
777 | 777 | branch=ctx.branch(), |
|
778 | 778 | editor=None, |
|
779 | 779 | ) |
|
780 | 780 | sucnode = memctx.commit() |
|
781 | 781 | prenode = ctx.node() |
|
782 | 782 | if prenode == sucnode: |
|
783 | 783 | ui.debug(b'node %s already existed\n' % (ctx.hex())) |
|
784 | 784 | else: |
|
785 | 785 | replacements[ctx.node()] = sucnode |
|
786 | 786 | |
|
787 | 787 | |
|
788 | 788 | def getfixers(ui): |
|
789 | 789 | """Returns a map of configured fixer tools indexed by their names |
|
790 | 790 | |
|
791 | 791 | Each value is a Fixer object with methods that implement the behavior of the |
|
792 | 792 | fixer's config suboptions. Does not validate the config values. |
|
793 | 793 | """ |
|
794 | 794 | fixers = {} |
|
795 | 795 | for name in fixernames(ui): |
|
796 | 796 | fixers[name] = Fixer() |
|
797 | attrs = ui.configsuboptions(b'fix', name)[1] | |
|
798 | 797 | for key, default in FIXER_ATTRS.items(): |
|
799 | 798 | setattr( |
|
800 | 799 | fixers[name], |
|
801 | 800 | pycompat.sysstr(b'_' + key), |
|
802 |
|
|
|
801 | ui.config(b'fix', name + b':' + key, default), | |
|
803 | 802 | ) |
|
804 | 803 | fixers[name]._priority = int(fixers[name]._priority) |
|
805 | 804 | fixers[name]._metadata = stringutil.parsebool(fixers[name]._metadata) |
|
806 | 805 | fixers[name]._skipclean = stringutil.parsebool(fixers[name]._skipclean) |
|
807 | 806 | fixers[name]._enabled = stringutil.parsebool(fixers[name]._enabled) |
|
808 | 807 | # Don't use a fixer if it has no pattern configured. It would be |
|
809 | 808 | # dangerous to let it affect all files. It would be pointless to let it |
|
810 | 809 | # affect no files. There is no reasonable subset of files to use as the |
|
811 | 810 | # default. |
|
812 | 811 | if fixers[name]._pattern is None: |
|
813 | 812 | ui.warn( |
|
814 | 813 | _(b'fixer tool has no pattern configuration: %s\n') % (name,) |
|
815 | 814 | ) |
|
816 | 815 | del fixers[name] |
|
817 | 816 | elif not fixers[name]._enabled: |
|
818 | 817 | ui.debug(b'ignoring disabled fixer tool: %s\n' % (name,)) |
|
819 | 818 | del fixers[name] |
|
820 | 819 | return collections.OrderedDict( |
|
821 | 820 | sorted(fixers.items(), key=lambda item: item[1]._priority, reverse=True) |
|
822 | 821 | ) |
|
823 | 822 | |
|
824 | 823 | |
|
825 | 824 | def fixernames(ui): |
|
826 | 825 | """Returns the names of [fix] config options that have suboptions""" |
|
827 | 826 | names = set() |
|
828 | 827 | for k, v in ui.configitems(b'fix'): |
|
829 | 828 | if b':' in k: |
|
830 | 829 | names.add(k.split(b':', 1)[0]) |
|
831 | 830 | return names |
|
832 | 831 | |
|
833 | 832 | |
|
834 | 833 | class Fixer(object): |
|
835 | 834 | """Wraps the raw config values for a fixer with methods""" |
|
836 | 835 | |
|
837 | 836 | def affects(self, opts, fixctx, path): |
|
838 | 837 | """Should this fixer run on the file at the given path and context?""" |
|
839 | 838 | return self._pattern is not None and scmutil.match( |
|
840 | 839 | fixctx, [self._pattern], opts |
|
841 | 840 | )(path) |
|
842 | 841 | |
|
843 | 842 | def shouldoutputmetadata(self): |
|
844 | 843 | """Should the stdout of this fixer start with JSON and a null byte?""" |
|
845 | 844 | return self._metadata |
|
846 | 845 | |
|
847 | 846 | def command(self, ui, path, ranges): |
|
848 | 847 | """A shell command to use to invoke this fixer on the given file/lines |
|
849 | 848 | |
|
850 | 849 | May return None if there is no appropriate command to run for the given |
|
851 | 850 | parameters. |
|
852 | 851 | """ |
|
853 | 852 | expand = cmdutil.rendercommandtemplate |
|
854 | 853 | parts = [ |
|
855 | 854 | expand( |
|
856 | 855 | ui, |
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857 | 856 | self._command, |
|
858 | 857 | {b'rootpath': path, b'basename': os.path.basename(path)}, |
|
859 | 858 | ) |
|
860 | 859 | ] |
|
861 | 860 | if self._linerange: |
|
862 | 861 | if self._skipclean and not ranges: |
|
863 | 862 | # No line ranges to fix, so don't run the fixer. |
|
864 | 863 | return None |
|
865 | 864 | for first, last in ranges: |
|
866 | 865 | parts.append( |
|
867 | 866 | expand( |
|
868 | 867 | ui, self._linerange, {b'first': first, b'last': last} |
|
869 | 868 | ) |
|
870 | 869 | ) |
|
871 | 870 | return b' '.join(parts) |
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