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dirs: resolve fuzzer OOM situation by disallowing deep directory hierarchies...
dirs: resolve fuzzer OOM situation by disallowing deep directory hierarchies It seems like 2048 directories ought to be enough for any reasonable use of Mercurial? A previous version of this patch scanned for slashes before any allocations occurred. That approach is slower than this in the happy path, but much faster than this in the case that too many slashes are encountered. We may want to revisit it in the future using memchr() so it'll be well-optimized by the libc we're using. .. bc: Mercurial will now defend against OOMs by refusing to operate on paths with 2048 or more components. This means that _extremely_ deep path hierarchies will be rejected, but we anticipate nobody is using hierarchies this deep. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7411

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dates.txt
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Some commands allow the user to specify a date, e.g.:
- backout, commit, import, tag: Specify the commit date.
- log, revert, update: Select revision(s) by date.
Many date formats are valid. Here are some examples:
- ``Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006`` (local timezone assumed)
- ``Dec 6 13:18 -0600`` (year assumed, time offset provided)
- ``Dec 6 13:18 UTC`` (UTC and GMT are aliases for +0000)
- ``Dec 6`` (midnight)
- ``13:18`` (today assumed)
- ``3:39`` (3:39AM assumed)
- ``3:39pm`` (15:39)
- ``2006-12-06 13:18:29`` (ISO 8601 format)
- ``2006-12-6 13:18``
- ``2006-12-6``
- ``12-6``
- ``12/6``
- ``12/6/6`` (Dec 6 2006)
- ``today`` (midnight)
- ``yesterday`` (midnight)
- ``now`` - right now
Lastly, there is Mercurial's internal format:
- ``1165411109 0`` (Wed Dec 6 13:18:29 2006 UTC)
This is the internal representation format for dates. The first number
is the number of seconds since the epoch (1970-01-01 00:00 UTC). The
second is the offset of the local timezone, in seconds west of UTC
(negative if the timezone is east of UTC).
The log command also accepts date ranges:
- ``<DATE`` - at or before a given date/time
- ``>DATE`` - on or after a given date/time
- ``DATE to DATE`` - a date range, inclusive
- ``-DAYS`` - within a given number of days of today