##// END OF EJS Templates
releasenotes: add a file in which to record release notes...
releasenotes: add a file in which to record release notes I've just spent a few very boring hours going through the changelog for the 5.0 release (829 commits). We only had 5 commits that used the syntax that the release notes extension expects. This commit adds a file in which we can record important changes. The file should preferably be edited in the patch that makes the important change, but it can also be edited after (I think this is an important benefit compared to the release notes extension). I'm thinking that we can rename the file from "next" to "5.1" or something when it's time, and then we'd create a new "next" file on the default branch. I've used the syntax that we use on the our wiki in the template, but I don't care much that we use any valid syntax at all. The idea is mostly to record important changes when they happen. I expect that some copy editing will be needed at release time anyway. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D6332
Martin von Zweigbergk -
r42457:0ed293a3 default
Show More
Name Size Modified Last Commit Author
/ contrib / fuzz
Makefile Loading ...
README.rst Loading ...
bdiff.cc Loading ...
dirstate.cc Loading ...
dirstate_corpus.py Loading ...
fm1readmarkers.cc Loading ...
fm1readmarkers_corpus.py Loading ...
fuzzutil.cc Loading ...
fuzzutil.h Loading ...
manifest.cc Loading ...
manifest_corpus.py Loading ...
mpatch.cc Loading ...
mpatch_corpus.py Loading ...
pyutil.cc Loading ...
pyutil.h Loading ...
revlog.cc Loading ...
revlog_corpus.py Loading ...
xdiff.cc Loading ...

How to add fuzzers (partially cribbed from oss-fuzz[0]):

  1. git clone https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz
  2. cd oss-fuzz
  3. python infra/helper.py build_image mercurial
  4. docker run --cap-add=SYS_PTRACE -it -v $HG_REPO_PATH:/hg-new
    gcr.io/oss-fuzz/mercurial bash
  5. cd /src
  6. rm -r mercurial
  7. ln -s /hg-new mercurial
  8. cd mercurial
  9. compile
  10. ls $OUT

Step 9 is literally running the command "compile", which is part of the docker container. Once you have that working, you can build the fuzzers like this (in the oss-fuzz repo):

python infra/helper.py build_fuzzers --sanitizer address mercurial $HG_REPO_PATH

(you can also say "memory", "undefined" or "coverage" for sanitizer). Then run the built fuzzers like this:

python infra/helper.py run_fuzzer mercurial -- $FUZZER

0: https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/blob/master/docs/new_project_guide.md