##// END OF EJS Templates
typing: attempt to remove @overloads in the platform module for stdlib methods...
typing: attempt to remove @overloads in the platform module for stdlib methods This is mostly successful, as examining util.pyi, posix.pyi, and windows.pyi after a pytype run shows that the type overloads for `oslink`, `readlink`, `removedirs`, `rename`, `split`, and `unlink` have been removed. (Some of these still have an @overload, but the differences are the variable names, not the types.) However, @overloads remain for `abspath` and `normpath` for some reason. It's useful to redefine these methods for the type checking phase because in addition to excluding str and PathLike variants, some of these functions have optional args in stdlib that aren't implemented in the custom implementation on Windows, and we want the type checking to flag that instead of assuming it's an allowable overload everywhere. One last quirk I noticed that I can't explain- `pycompat.TYPE_CHECKING` is always False, so the conditionals need to check `typing.TYPE_CHECKING` directly. I tried dropping the custom code for assigning `pycompat.TYPE_CHECKING` and simply did `from typing import TYPE_CHECKING` directly in pycompat.py, and used `pycompat.TYPE_CHECKING` for the conditional here... and pytype complained that `pycompat` doesn't have the `TYPE_CHECKING` variable.

File last commit:

r48775:4d2a5ca0 default
r50713:3fd5824f default
Show More
revlog.rs
72 lines | 2.2 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// Copyright 2018-2020 Georges Racinet <georges.racinet@octobus.net>
// and Mercurial contributors
//
// This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
// GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
//! Mercurial concepts for handling revision history
pub mod node;
pub mod nodemap;
mod nodemap_docket;
pub mod path_encode;
pub use node::{FromHexError, Node, NodePrefix};
pub mod changelog;
pub mod filelog;
pub mod index;
pub mod manifest;
pub mod patch;
pub mod revlog;
/// Mercurial revision numbers
///
/// As noted in revlog.c, revision numbers are actually encoded in
/// 4 bytes, and are liberally converted to ints, whence the i32
pub type Revision = i32;
/// Marker expressing the absence of a parent
///
/// Independently of the actual representation, `NULL_REVISION` is guaranteed
/// to be smaller than all existing revisions.
pub const NULL_REVISION: Revision = -1;
/// Same as `mercurial.node.wdirrev`
///
/// This is also equal to `i32::max_value()`, but it's better to spell
/// it out explicitely, same as in `mercurial.node`
#[allow(clippy::unreadable_literal)]
pub const WORKING_DIRECTORY_REVISION: Revision = 0x7fffffff;
pub const WORKING_DIRECTORY_HEX: &str =
"ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff";
/// The simplest expression of what we need of Mercurial DAGs.
pub trait Graph {
/// Return the two parents of the given `Revision`.
///
/// Each of the parents can be independently `NULL_REVISION`
fn parents(&self, rev: Revision) -> Result<[Revision; 2], GraphError>;
}
#[derive(Clone, Debug, PartialEq)]
pub enum GraphError {
ParentOutOfRange(Revision),
WorkingDirectoryUnsupported,
}
/// The Mercurial Revlog Index
///
/// This is currently limited to the minimal interface that is needed for
/// the [`nodemap`](nodemap/index.html) module
pub trait RevlogIndex {
/// Total number of Revisions referenced in this index
fn len(&self) -> usize;
fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
self.len() == 0
}
/// Return a reference to the Node or `None` if rev is out of bounds
///
/// `NULL_REVISION` is not considered to be out of bounds.
fn node(&self, rev: Revision) -> Option<&Node>;
}