##// END OF EJS Templates
import: simplify status reporting logic (and make it more I18N-friendly)...
import: simplify status reporting logic (and make it more I18N-friendly) The old code printed (with ui.status()) the changeset ID created by patch N after committing patch N+1, e.g. applying patch1 applying patch2 applied 1d4bd90af0e4 where 1d4bd90af0e4 is the changeset ID resulting from patch1. That's just weird. It's also inconsistent: we only reported the changeset ID when applying >1 patches. And it's inconsistent with 'commit', which only tells you the new changeset ID in verbose mode. Finally, the existing code was I18N-hostile, since it concatenated translated strings. The new way is to print the just-created changeset ID with ui.note() immediately after committing it. It also clarifies what the user message is for easier I18N.

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__init__.py
44 lines | 1.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# __init__.py - low-level interfaces to the Linux inotify subsystem
# Copyright 2006 Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>
# This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of version 2.1 of the GNU Lesser General Public
# License, or any later version.
'''Low-level interface to the Linux inotify subsystem.
The inotify subsystem provides an efficient mechanism for file status
monitoring and change notification.
This package provides the low-level inotify system call interface and
associated constants and helper functions.
For a higher-level interface that remains highly efficient, use the
inotify.watcher package.'''
__author__ = "Bryan O'Sullivan <bos@serpentine.com>"
from _inotify import *
procfs_path = '/proc/sys/fs/inotify'
def _read_procfs_value(name):
def read_value():
try:
fp = open(procfs_path + '/' + name)
r = int(fp.read())
fp.close()
return r
except OSError:
return None
read_value.__doc__ = '''Return the value of the %s setting from /proc.
If inotify is not enabled on this system, return None.''' % name
return read_value
max_queued_events = _read_procfs_value('max_queued_events')
max_user_instances = _read_procfs_value('max_user_instances')
max_user_watches = _read_procfs_value('max_user_watches')