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outgoing: respect ":pushurl" paths (issue5365)...
outgoing: respect ":pushurl" paths (issue5365) Make 'hg outgoing' respect "paths.default:pushurl" in addition to "paths.default-push". 'hg outgoing' has always meant "what will happen if I run 'hg push'?" and it's still documented that way: Show changesets not found in the specified destination repository or the default push location. These are the changesets that would be pushed if a push was requested. If the user uses the now-deprecated "paths.default-push" path, it continues to work that way. However, as described at https://bz.mercurial-scm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5365, it doesn't behave the same with "paths.default:pushurl". Why does it matter? Similar to the bugzilla reporter, I have a read-only mirror of a non-Mercurial repository: upstream -> imported mirror -> user clone ^-----------------------/ Users push directly to upstream, and that content is then imported into the mirror. However, those repositories are not the same; it's possible that the mirroring has either broken completely, or an import process is running and not yet complete. In those cases, 'hg outgoing' will list changesets that have already been pushed. Mozilla's desired behavior described in bug 5365 can be accomplished through other means (e.g. 'hg outgoing default'), preserving the consistency and meaning of 'hg outgoing'.

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pointer.py
73 lines | 2.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# pointer.py - Git-LFS pointer serialization
#
# Copyright 2017 Facebook, Inc.
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import re
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import (
error,
)
class InvalidPointer(error.RevlogError):
pass
class gitlfspointer(dict):
VERSION = 'https://git-lfs.github.com/spec/v1'
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
self['version'] = self.VERSION
super(gitlfspointer, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
@classmethod
def deserialize(cls, text):
try:
return cls(l.split(' ', 1) for l in text.splitlines()).validate()
except ValueError: # l.split returns 1 item instead of 2
raise InvalidPointer(_('cannot parse git-lfs text: %r') % text)
def serialize(self):
sortkeyfunc = lambda x: (x[0] != 'version', x)
items = sorted(self.validate().iteritems(), key=sortkeyfunc)
return ''.join('%s %s\n' % (k, v) for k, v in items)
def oid(self):
return self['oid'].split(':')[-1]
def size(self):
return int(self['size'])
# regular expressions used by _validate
# see https://github.com/git-lfs/git-lfs/blob/master/docs/spec.md
_keyre = re.compile(r'\A[a-z0-9.-]+\Z')
_valuere = re.compile(r'\A[^\n]*\Z')
_requiredre = {
'size': re.compile(r'\A[0-9]+\Z'),
'oid': re.compile(r'\Asha256:[0-9a-f]{64}\Z'),
'version': re.compile(r'\A%s\Z' % re.escape(VERSION)),
}
def validate(self):
"""raise InvalidPointer on error. return self if there is no error"""
requiredcount = 0
for k, v in self.iteritems():
if k in self._requiredre:
if not self._requiredre[k].match(v):
raise InvalidPointer(_('unexpected value: %s=%r') % (k, v))
requiredcount += 1
elif not self._keyre.match(k):
raise InvalidPointer(_('unexpected key: %s') % k)
if not self._valuere.match(v):
raise InvalidPointer(_('unexpected value: %s=%r') % (k, v))
if len(self._requiredre) != requiredcount:
miss = sorted(set(self._requiredre.keys()).difference(self.keys()))
raise InvalidPointer(_('missed keys: %s') % ', '.join(miss))
return self
deserialize = gitlfspointer.deserialize