##// END OF EJS Templates
revset: introduce new operator "##" to concatenate strings/symbols at runtime...
revset: introduce new operator "##" to concatenate strings/symbols at runtime Before this patch, there is no way to concatenate strings at runtime. For example, to search for the issue ID "1234" in descriptions against all of "issue 1234", "issue:1234", issue1234" and "bug(1234)" patterns, the revset below should be written fully from scratch for each issue ID. grep(r"\bissue[ :]?1234\b|\bbug\(1234\)") This patch introduces new infix operator "##" to concatenate strings/symbols at runtime. Operator symbol "##" comes from the same one of C pre-processor. This concatenation allows parametrizing a part of strings in revset queries. In the case of example above, the definition of the revset alias using operator "##" below can search issue ID "1234" in complicated patterns by "issue(1234)" simply: issue($1) = grep(r"\bissue[ :]?" ## $1 ## r"\b|\bbug\(" ## $1 ## r"\)") "##" operator does: - concatenate not only strings but also symbols into the string Exact distinction between strings and symbols seems not to be convenience, because it is tiresome for users (and "revset.getstring" treats both similarly) For example of revset alias "issue()", "issue(1234)" is easier than "issue('1234')". - have higher priority than any other prefix, infix and postfix operators (like as "##" of C pre-processor) This patch (re-)assigns the priority 20 to "##", and 21 to "(", because priority 19 is already assigned to "-" as prefix "negate".

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share.py
125 lines | 4.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# Copyright 2006, 2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com>
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
'''share a common history between several working directories'''
from mercurial.i18n import _
from mercurial import cmdutil, hg, util, extensions, bookmarks
from mercurial.hg import repository, parseurl
import errno
cmdtable = {}
command = cmdutil.command(cmdtable)
testedwith = 'internal'
@command('share',
[('U', 'noupdate', None, _('do not create a working copy')),
('B', 'bookmarks', None, _('also share bookmarks'))],
_('[-U] [-B] SOURCE [DEST]'),
norepo=True)
def share(ui, source, dest=None, noupdate=False, bookmarks=False):
"""create a new shared repository
Initialize a new repository and working directory that shares its
history (and optionally bookmarks) with another repository.
.. note::
using rollback or extensions that destroy/modify history (mq,
rebase, etc.) can cause considerable confusion with shared
clones. In particular, if two shared clones are both updated to
the same changeset, and one of them destroys that changeset
with rollback, the other clone will suddenly stop working: all
operations will fail with "abort: working directory has unknown
parent". The only known workaround is to use debugsetparents on
the broken clone to reset it to a changeset that still exists.
"""
return hg.share(ui, source, dest, not noupdate, bookmarks)
@command('unshare', [], '')
def unshare(ui, repo):
"""convert a shared repository to a normal one
Copy the store data to the repo and remove the sharedpath data.
"""
if not repo.shared():
raise util.Abort(_("this is not a shared repo"))
destlock = lock = None
lock = repo.lock()
try:
# we use locks here because if we race with commit, we
# can end up with extra data in the cloned revlogs that's
# not pointed to by changesets, thus causing verify to
# fail
destlock = hg.copystore(ui, repo, repo.path)
sharefile = repo.join('sharedpath')
util.rename(sharefile, sharefile + '.old')
repo.requirements.discard('sharedpath')
repo._writerequirements()
finally:
destlock and destlock.release()
lock and lock.release()
# update store, spath, sopener and sjoin of repo
repo.unfiltered().__init__(repo.baseui, repo.root)
def extsetup(ui):
extensions.wrapfunction(bookmarks.bmstore, 'getbkfile', getbkfile)
extensions.wrapfunction(bookmarks.bmstore, 'recordchange', recordchange)
extensions.wrapfunction(bookmarks.bmstore, 'write', write)
def _hassharedbookmarks(repo):
"""Returns whether this repo has shared bookmarks"""
try:
repo.vfs.read('bookmarks.shared')
return True
except IOError, inst:
if inst.errno != errno.ENOENT:
raise
return False
def _getsrcrepo(repo):
"""
Returns the source repository object for a given shared repository.
If repo is not a shared repository, return None.
"""
if repo.sharedpath == repo.path:
return None
# the sharedpath always ends in the .hg; we want the path to the repo
source = repo.vfs.split(repo.sharedpath)[0]
srcurl, branches = parseurl(source)
return repository(repo.ui, srcurl)
def getbkfile(orig, self, repo):
if _hassharedbookmarks(repo):
srcrepo = _getsrcrepo(repo)
if srcrepo is not None:
repo = srcrepo
return orig(self, repo)
def recordchange(orig, self, tr):
# Continue with write to local bookmarks file as usual
orig(self, tr)
if _hassharedbookmarks(self._repo):
srcrepo = _getsrcrepo(self._repo)
if srcrepo is not None:
category = 'share-bookmarks'
tr.addpostclose(category, lambda tr: self._writerepo(srcrepo))
def write(orig, self):
# First write local bookmarks file in case we ever unshare
orig(self)
if _hassharedbookmarks(self._repo):
srcrepo = _getsrcrepo(self._repo)
if srcrepo is not None:
self._writerepo(srcrepo)