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fix: add a -s option to format a revision and its descendants...
fix: add a -s option to format a revision and its descendants `hg fix -r abc123` will format that commit but not its descendants. That seems expected given the option name (`-r`), but it's very rarely what the user wants to do. The problem is that any descendants of that commit will not be formatted, leaving them as orphans that are hard to evolve. They are hard to evolve because the new parent will have formatting changes that the orphan doesn't have. I talked to Danny Hooper (who wrote most of the fix extension) about the problem and we agreed that deprecating `-r` in favor of a new `-s` argument (mimicing rebase's `-s`) would be a good way of reducing the risk that users end up with these hard-to-evolve orphans. So that's what this patch implements. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D8287

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r45064:5205b46b default
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__init__.py
75 lines | 2.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# Copyright (c) 2017-present, Gregory Szorc
# All rights reserved.
#
# This software may be modified and distributed under the terms
# of the BSD license. See the LICENSE file for details.
"""Python interface to the Zstandard (zstd) compression library."""
from __future__ import absolute_import, unicode_literals
# This module serves 2 roles:
#
# 1) Export the C or CFFI "backend" through a central module.
# 2) Implement additional functionality built on top of C or CFFI backend.
import os
import platform
# Some Python implementations don't support C extensions. That's why we have
# a CFFI implementation in the first place. The code here import one of our
# "backends" then re-exports the symbols from this module. For convenience,
# we support falling back to the CFFI backend if the C extension can't be
# imported. But for performance reasons, we only do this on unknown Python
# implementation. Notably, for CPython we require the C extension by default.
# Because someone will inevitably want special behavior, the behavior is
# configurable via an environment variable. A potentially better way to handle
# this is to import a special ``__importpolicy__`` module or something
# defining a variable and `setup.py` could write the file with whatever
# policy was specified at build time. Until someone needs it, we go with
# the hacky but simple environment variable approach.
_module_policy = os.environ.get("PYTHON_ZSTANDARD_IMPORT_POLICY", "default")
if _module_policy == "default":
if platform.python_implementation() in ("CPython",):
from zstd import *
backend = "cext"
elif platform.python_implementation() in ("PyPy",):
from .cffi import *
backend = "cffi"
else:
try:
from zstd import *
backend = "cext"
except ImportError:
from .cffi import *
backend = "cffi"
elif _module_policy == "cffi_fallback":
try:
from zstd import *
backend = "cext"
except ImportError:
from .cffi import *
backend = "cffi"
elif _module_policy == "cext":
from zstd import *
backend = "cext"
elif _module_policy == "cffi":
from .cffi import *
backend = "cffi"
else:
raise ImportError(
"unknown module import policy: %s; use default, cffi_fallback, "
"cext, or cffi" % _module_policy
)
# Keep this in sync with python-zstandard.h.
__version__ = "0.13.0"