##// END OF EJS Templates
fsmonitor: hook up state-enter, state-leave signals...
fsmonitor: hook up state-enter, state-leave signals Keeping the codebase in sync with upstream: Watchman 4.4 introduced an advanced settling feature that allows publishing tools to notify subscribing tools of the boundaries for important filesystem operations. https://facebook.github.io/watchman/docs/cmd/subscribe.html#advanced-settling has more information about how this feature works. This diff connects a signal that we're calling `hg.update` to the mercurial update function so that mercurial can indirectly notify tools (such as IDEs or build machinery) when it is changing the working copy. This will allow those tools to pause their normal actions as the files are changing and defer them until the end of the operation. In addition to sending the enter/leave signals for the state, we are able to publish useful metadata along the same channel. In this case we are passing the following pieces of information: 1. destination revision hash 2. An estimate of the distance between the current state and the target state 3. A success indicator. 4. Whether it is a partial update The distance is estimate may be useful to tools that wish to change their strategy after the update has complete. For example, a large update may be efficient to deal with by walking some internal state in the subscriber rather than feeding every individual file notification through its normal (small) delta mechanism. We estimate the distance by comparing the repository revision number. In some cases we cannot come up with a number so we report 0. This is ok; we're offering this for informational purposes only and don't guarantee its accuracy. The success indicator is only really meaningful when we generate the state-leave notification; it indicates the overall success of the update.

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templates.txt
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Mercurial allows you to customize output of commands through
templates. You can either pass in a template or select an existing
template-style from the command line, via the --template option.
You can customize output for any "log-like" command: log,
outgoing, incoming, tip, parents, and heads.
Some built-in styles are packaged with Mercurial. These can be listed
with :hg:`log --template list`. Example usage::
$ hg log -r1.0::1.1 --template changelog
A template is a piece of text, with markup to invoke variable
expansion::
$ hg log -r1 --template "{node}\n"
b56ce7b07c52de7d5fd79fb89701ea538af65746
Strings in curly braces are called keywords. The availability of
keywords depends on the exact context of the templater. These
keywords are usually available for templating a log-like command:
.. keywordsmarker
The "date" keyword does not produce human-readable output. If you
want to use a date in your output, you can use a filter to process
it. Filters are functions which return a string based on the input
variable. Be sure to use the stringify filter first when you're
applying a string-input filter to a list-like input variable.
You can also use a chain of filters to get the desired output::
$ hg tip --template "{date|isodate}\n"
2008-08-21 18:22 +0000
List of filters:
.. filtersmarker
Note that a filter is nothing more than a function call, i.e.
``expr|filter`` is equivalent to ``filter(expr)``.
In addition to filters, there are some basic built-in functions:
.. functionsmarker
Also, for any expression that returns a list, there is a list operator::
expr % "{template}"
As seen in the above example, ``{template}`` is interpreted as a template.
To prevent it from being interpreted, you can use an escape character ``\{``
or a raw string prefix, ``r'...'``.
Some sample command line templates:
- Format lists, e.g. files::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "files:\n{files % ' {file}\n'}"
- Join the list of files with a ", "::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "files: {join(files, ', ')}\n"
- Modify each line of a commit description::
$ hg log --template "{splitlines(desc) % '**** {line}\n'}"
- Format date::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "{date(date, '%Y')}\n"
- Display date in UTC::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "{localdate(date, 'UTC')|date}\n"
- Output the description set to a fill-width of 30::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "{fill(desc, 30)}"
- Use a conditional to test for the default branch::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "{ifeq(branch, 'default', 'on the main branch',
'on branch {branch}')}\n"
- Append a newline if not empty::
$ hg tip --template "{if(author, '{author}\n')}"
- Label the output for use with the color extension::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "{label('changeset.{phase}', node|short)}\n"
- Invert the firstline filter, i.e. everything but the first line::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "{sub(r'^.*\n?\n?', '', desc)}\n"
- Display the contents of the 'extra' field, one per line::
$ hg log -r 0 --template "{join(extras, '\n')}\n"
- Mark the active bookmark with '*'::
$ hg log --template "{bookmarks % '{bookmark}{ifeq(bookmark, active, '*')} '}\n"
- Find the previous release candidate tag, the distance and changes since the tag::
$ hg log -r . --template "{latesttag('re:^.*-rc$') % '{tag}, {changes}, {distance}'}\n"
- Mark the working copy parent with '@'::
$ hg log --template "{ifcontains(rev, revset('.'), '@')}\n"
- Show details of parent revisions::
$ hg log --template "{revset('parents(%d)', rev) % '{desc|firstline}\n'}"
- Show only commit descriptions that start with "template"::
$ hg log --template "{startswith('template', firstline(desc))}\n"
- Print the first word of each line of a commit message::
$ hg log --template "{word(0, desc)}\n"