##// END OF EJS Templates
absorb: preserve changesets which were already empty...
absorb: preserve changesets which were already empty Most commands in Mercurial (commit, rebase, absorb itself) don’t create empty changesets or drop them if they become empty. If there’s a changeset that’s empty, it must be a deliberate choice of the user. At least it shouldn’t be absorb’s responsibility to prune them. The fact that changesets that became empty during absorb are pruned, is unaffected by this. This case was found while writing patches which make it possible to configure absorb and rebase to not drop empty changesets. Even without having such config set, I think it’s valuable to preserve changesets which were already empty.

File last commit:

r44900:69392460 default
r45518:1ca0047f default
Show More
logtoprocess.py
83 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# logtoprocess.py - send ui.log() data to a subprocess
#
# Copyright 2016 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.
"""send ui.log() data to a subprocess (EXPERIMENTAL)
This extension lets you specify a shell command per ui.log() event,
sending all remaining arguments to as environment variables to that command.
Positional arguments construct a log message, which is passed in the `MSG1`
environment variables. Each keyword argument is set as a `OPT_UPPERCASE_KEY`
variable (so the key is uppercased, and prefixed with `OPT_`). The original
event name is passed in the `EVENT` environment variable, and the process ID
of mercurial is given in `HGPID`.
So given a call `ui.log('foo', 'bar %s\n', 'baz', spam='eggs'), a script
configured for the `foo` event can expect an environment with `MSG1=bar baz`,
and `OPT_SPAM=eggs`.
Scripts are configured in the `[logtoprocess]` section, each key an event name.
For example::
[logtoprocess]
commandexception = echo "$MSG1" > /var/log/mercurial_exceptions.log
would log the warning message and traceback of any failed command dispatch.
Scripts are run asynchronously as detached daemon processes; mercurial will
not ensure that they exit cleanly.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import os
from mercurial.utils import procutil
# Note for extension authors: ONLY specify testedwith = 'ships-with-hg-core' for
# extensions which SHIP WITH MERCURIAL. Non-mainline extensions should
# be specifying the version(s) of Mercurial they are tested with, or
# leave the attribute unspecified.
testedwith = b'ships-with-hg-core'
class processlogger(object):
"""Map log events to external commands
Arguments are passed on as environment variables.
"""
def __init__(self, ui):
self._scripts = dict(ui.configitems(b'logtoprocess'))
def tracked(self, event):
return bool(self._scripts.get(event))
def log(self, ui, event, msg, opts):
script = self._scripts[event]
maxmsg = 100000
if len(msg) > maxmsg:
# Each env var has a 128KiB limit on linux. msg can be long, in
# particular for command event, where it's the full command line.
# Prefer truncating the message than raising "Argument list too
# long" error.
msg = msg[:maxmsg] + b' (truncated)'
env = {
b'EVENT': event,
b'HGPID': os.getpid(),
b'MSG1': msg,
}
# keyword arguments get prefixed with OPT_ and uppercased
env.update(
(b'OPT_%s' % key.upper(), value) for key, value in opts.items()
)
fullenv = procutil.shellenviron(env)
procutil.runbgcommand(script, fullenv, shell=True)
def uipopulate(ui):
ui.setlogger(b'logtoprocess', processlogger(ui))