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hghave: disallow symlinks on Windows...
hghave: disallow symlinks on Windows Symlinks on Windows require either a special priviledge, or enabling Developer Mode. It's probably the latter that is enabled on the new CI machine. But since Mercurial itself is saying no to symlinks on Windows, the tests for symlinks shouldn't be attempted. This should fix a lot of the noise in the py3 tests. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D7233

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dagops.rs
53 lines | 1.8 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// dagops.rs
//
// Copyright 2019 Georges Racinet <georges.racinet@octobus.net>
//
// This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
// GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
//! Bindings for the `hg::dagops` module provided by the
//! `hg-core` package.
//!
//! From Python, this will be seen as `mercurial.rustext.dagop`
use crate::{
cindex::Index, conversion::rev_pyiter_collect, exceptions::GraphError,
};
use cpython::{PyDict, PyModule, PyObject, PyResult, Python};
use hg::dagops;
use hg::Revision;
use std::collections::HashSet;
/// Using the the `index`, return heads out of any Python iterable of Revisions
///
/// This is the Rust counterpart for `mercurial.dagop.headrevs`
pub fn headrevs(
py: Python,
index: PyObject,
revs: PyObject,
) -> PyResult<HashSet<Revision>> {
let mut as_set: HashSet<Revision> = rev_pyiter_collect(py, &revs)?;
dagops::retain_heads(&Index::new(py, index)?, &mut as_set)
.map_err(|e| GraphError::pynew(py, e))?;
Ok(as_set)
}
/// Create the module, with `__package__` given from parent
pub fn init_module(py: Python, package: &str) -> PyResult<PyModule> {
let dotted_name = &format!("{}.dagop", package);
let m = PyModule::new(py, dotted_name)?;
m.add(py, "__package__", package)?;
m.add(py, "__doc__", "DAG operations - Rust implementation")?;
m.add(
py,
"headrevs",
py_fn!(py, headrevs(index: PyObject, revs: PyObject)),
)?;
let sys = PyModule::import(py, "sys")?;
let sys_modules: PyDict = sys.get(py, "modules")?.extract(py)?;
sys_modules.set_item(py, dotted_name, &m)?;
// Example C code (see pyexpat.c and import.c) will "give away the
// reference", but we won't because it will be consumed once the
// Rust PyObject is dropped.
Ok(m)
}