##// END OF EJS Templates
tests: force `seq` to print with '\n' EOL...
tests: force `seq` to print with '\n' EOL It looks like consistent EOL is the reason for 0605726179a0, but now on py3, `print()` uses the platform EOL without regard to binary mode. The tests mostly use this to loop over a sequence of number in the shell, but there are a handful that redirect output to a file. Specifically, this fixes Windows runs of `test-bundle2-multiple-changegroups.t`, but there may be other tests this fixes. Some other `tests/*.py` files also set binary mode on stdout, but they also write bytes directly to `sys.stdout.buffer`. I'm not doing that here because PyCharm flags these write calls for passing bytes instead of str (PyCharm is likely wrong, but possibly confused because the code falls back to `sys.stdout` if there is no `.buffer` attribute), and it's annoying.
Matt Harbison -
r52878:2924676d default
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Mercurial

Mercurial is a fast, easy to use, distributed revision control tool for software developers.

Basic install:

$ make            # see install targets
$ make install    # do a system-wide install
$ hg debuginstall # sanity-check setup
$ hg              # see help

Running without installing:

$ make local      # build for inplace usage
$ ./hg --version  # should show the latest version

See https://mercurial-scm.org/ for detailed installation instructions, platform-specific notes, and Mercurial user information.

Notes for packagers

Mercurial ships a copy of the python-zstandard sources. This is used to provide support for zstd compression and decompression functionality. The module is not intended to be replaced by the plain python-zstandard nor is it intended to use a system zstd library. Patches can result in hard to diagnose errors and are explicitly discouraged as unsupported configuration.