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tests: adjust to the new format in pyflakes output...
tests: adjust to the new format in pyflakes output According to the pyflakes' NEWS.rst, the default output format changed recently: 2.2.0 (2020-04-08) - Include column information in error messages So the lines now read: contrib/perf.py:149:15 undefined name 'xrange' mercurial/hgweb/server.py:427:13 undefined name 'reload' mercurial/util.py:2862:24 undefined name 'file' This is a graft of a similar fix that ended up on default. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8630

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dagops.rs
53 lines | 1.8 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// dagops.rs
//
// Copyright 2019 Georges Racinet <georges.racinet@octobus.net>
//
// This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
// GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
//! Bindings for the `hg::dagops` module provided by the
//! `hg-core` package.
//!
//! From Python, this will be seen as `mercurial.rustext.dagop`
use crate::{conversion::rev_pyiter_collect, exceptions::GraphError};
use cpython::{PyDict, PyModule, PyObject, PyResult, Python};
use hg::dagops;
use hg::Revision;
use std::collections::HashSet;
use crate::revlog::pyindex_to_graph;
/// Using the the `index`, return heads out of any Python iterable of Revisions
///
/// This is the Rust counterpart for `mercurial.dagop.headrevs`
pub fn headrevs(
py: Python,
index: PyObject,
revs: PyObject,
) -> PyResult<HashSet<Revision>> {
let mut as_set: HashSet<Revision> = rev_pyiter_collect(py, &revs)?;
dagops::retain_heads(&pyindex_to_graph(py, index)?, &mut as_set)
.map_err(|e| GraphError::pynew(py, e))?;
Ok(as_set)
}
/// Create the module, with `__package__` given from parent
pub fn init_module(py: Python, package: &str) -> PyResult<PyModule> {
let dotted_name = &format!("{}.dagop", package);
let m = PyModule::new(py, dotted_name)?;
m.add(py, "__package__", package)?;
m.add(py, "__doc__", "DAG operations - Rust implementation")?;
m.add(
py,
"headrevs",
py_fn!(py, headrevs(index: PyObject, revs: PyObject)),
)?;
let sys = PyModule::import(py, "sys")?;
let sys_modules: PyDict = sys.get(py, "modules")?.extract(py)?;
sys_modules.set_item(py, dotted_name, &m)?;
// Example C code (see pyexpat.c and import.c) will "give away the
// reference", but we won't because it will be consumed once the
// Rust PyObject is dropped.
Ok(m)
}