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cmdutil: add class to restore dirstate during unexpected failure...
cmdutil: add class to restore dirstate during unexpected failure Before this patch, after "dirstate.write()" execution, there was no way to restore dirstate to the original status before "dirstate.write()". In some code paths, "dirstate.invalidate()" is used as a kind of "restore .hg/dirstate to the original status", but it just avoids writing changes in memory out, and doesn't actually restore the ".hg/dirstate" file. To fix the issue that the recent (in memory) dirstate isn't visible to external processes (e.g. "precommit" hooks), "dirstate.write()" should be invoked before invocation of external processes. But at the same time, ".hg/dirstate" should be restored to its content before "dirstate.write()" during an unexpected failure in some cases. This patch adds the class "dirstateguard" to easily restore ".hg/dirstate" during unexpected failures. Typical usecase of it is: # (1) build dirstate up .... # (2) write dirstate out, and backup ".hg/dirstate" dsguard = dirstateguard(repo, 'scopename') try: # (3) execute somethig to do: # this may imply making some additional changes on dirstate .... # (4) unlink backed-up dirstate file at the end of dsguard scope dsguard.close() finally: # (5) if execution is aborted before "dsguard.close()", # ".hg/dirstate" is restored from the backup dsguard.release() For this kind of issue, an "extending transaction" approach (in https://titanpad.com/mercurial32-sprint) seems to not be suitable, because: - transaction nesting occurs in some cases (e.g. "shelve => rebase"), and - "dirstate" may be already modified since the beginning of OUTER transaction scope, then - dirstate should be backed up into the file other than "dirstate.journal" at the beginning of INNER transaction scope, but - such alternative backup files are useless for transaction itself, and increases complication of its implementation "transaction" and "dirstateguard" differ from each other also in "what it should do for .hg/dirstate" in cases other than success. ============== ======= ======== ============= type success fail "hg rollback" ============== ======= ======== ============= transaction keep keep restore dirstateguard keep restore (not implied) ============== ======= ======== ============= Some collaboration between transaction and dirstate will probably be introduced in the future. But this layer is needed in all cases.

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editmerge
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
# A simple script for opening merge conflicts in the editor.
# Use the following Mercurial settings to enable it.
#
# [ui]
# merge = editmerge
#
# [merge-tools]
# editmerge.args=$output
# editmerge.check=changed
# editmerge.premerge=keep
FILE=$1
getlines() {
grep -n "<<<<<<" $FILE | cut -f1 -d:
}
# editor preference loosely based on http://mercurial.selenic.com/wiki/editor
# hg showconfig is at the bottom though, since it's slow to run (0.15 seconds)
ED=$HGEDITOR
if [ "$ED" = "" ] ; then
ED=$VISUAL
fi
if [ "$ED" = "" ] ; then
ED=$EDITOR
fi
if [ "$ED" = "" ] ; then
ED=$(hg showconfig ui.editor)
fi
if [ "$ED" = "" ] ; then
echo "merge failed - unable to find editor"
exit 1
fi
if [ "$ED" = "emacs" ] || [ "$ED" = "nano" ] || [ "$ED" = "vim" ] ; then
FIRSTLINE=$(getlines | head -n 1)
PREVIOUSLINE=""
# open the editor to the first conflict until there are no more
# or the user stops editing the file
while [ ! "$FIRSTLINE" = "" ] && [ ! "$FIRSTLINE" = "$PREVIOUSLINE" ] ; do
$ED +$FIRSTLINE $FILE
PREVIOUSLINE=$FIRSTLINE
FIRSTLINE=$(getlines | head -n 1)
done
else
$ED $FILE
fi
# get the line numbers of the remaining conflicts
CONFLICTS=$(getlines | sed ':a;N;$!ba;s/\n/, /g')
if [ ! "$CONFLICTS" = "" ] ; then
echo "merge failed - resolve the conflicts (line $CONFLICTS) then use 'hg resolve --mark'"
exit 1
fi
exit 0