##// END OF EJS Templates
hgweb: add HTML elements to control whitespace settings for annotate...
hgweb: add HTML elements to control whitespace settings for annotate Building on top of the new URL query string arguments to control whitespace settings for annotate, this commit adds HTML checkboxes reflecting the values of these arguments to the paper and gitweb themes. The actual diff settings are now exported to the templating layer. The HTML templates add these as data-* attributes so they are accessible to the DOM. A new <form> with various <input> elements is added. The <form> is initially hidden via CSS. A shared JavaScript function (which runs after the <form> has been rendered but before the annotate HTML (because annotate HTML could take a while to load and we want the form to render quickly) takes care of setting the checked state of each box from the data-* attributes. It also registers an event handler to modify the URL and refresh the page whenever the checkbox state is changed. I'm using the URLSearchParams interface to perform URL manipulation. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/URLSearchParams tells me this may not be supported on older web browsers. Yes, apparently the web API didn't have a standard API to parse and format query strings until recently. Hence the check for the presence of this feature in the JavaScript. If the browser doesn't support the feature, the <form> will remain hidden and behavior will like it currently is. We could polyfill this feature or implement our own query string parsing. But I'm lazy and this could be done as a follow-up if people miss it. We could certainly expand this feature to support more diff options (such as lines of context). That's why the potentially reusable code is stored in a reusable place. It is also certainly possible to add diff controls to other pages that display diffs. But since Mozillians are making noise about controlling which revisions annotate shows, I figured I'd start there. .. feature:: Control whitespace settings for annotation on hgweb /annotate URLs on hgweb now accept query string arguments to influence how whitespace changes impact results. The arguments "ignorews," "ignorewsamount," "ignorewseol," and "ignoreblanklines" now have the same meaning as their [annotate] config section counterparts. Any provided setting overrides the server default. HTML checkboxes have been added to the paper and gitweb themes to expose current whitespace settings and to easily modify the current view. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D850

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mpatch.py
127 lines | 3.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# mpatch.py - Python implementation of mpatch.c
#
# Copyright 2009 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.com> and others
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
from __future__ import absolute_import
import struct
from .. import pycompat
stringio = pycompat.stringio
class mpatchError(Exception):
"""error raised when a delta cannot be decoded
"""
# This attempts to apply a series of patches in time proportional to
# the total size of the patches, rather than patches * len(text). This
# means rather than shuffling strings around, we shuffle around
# pointers to fragments with fragment lists.
#
# When the fragment lists get too long, we collapse them. To do this
# efficiently, we do all our operations inside a buffer created by
# mmap and simply use memmove. This avoids creating a bunch of large
# temporary string buffers.
def _pull(dst, src, l): # pull l bytes from src
while l:
f = src.pop()
if f[0] > l: # do we need to split?
src.append((f[0] - l, f[1] + l))
dst.append((l, f[1]))
return
dst.append(f)
l -= f[0]
def _move(m, dest, src, count):
"""move count bytes from src to dest
The file pointer is left at the end of dest.
"""
m.seek(src)
buf = m.read(count)
m.seek(dest)
m.write(buf)
def _collect(m, buf, list):
start = buf
for l, p in reversed(list):
_move(m, buf, p, l)
buf += l
return (buf - start, start)
def patches(a, bins):
if not bins:
return a
plens = [len(x) for x in bins]
pl = sum(plens)
bl = len(a) + pl
tl = bl + bl + pl # enough for the patches and two working texts
b1, b2 = 0, bl
if not tl:
return a
m = stringio()
# load our original text
m.write(a)
frags = [(len(a), b1)]
# copy all the patches into our segment so we can memmove from them
pos = b2 + bl
m.seek(pos)
for p in bins: m.write(p)
for plen in plens:
# if our list gets too long, execute it
if len(frags) > 128:
b2, b1 = b1, b2
frags = [_collect(m, b1, frags)]
new = []
end = pos + plen
last = 0
while pos < end:
m.seek(pos)
try:
p1, p2, l = struct.unpack(">lll", m.read(12))
except struct.error:
raise mpatchError("patch cannot be decoded")
_pull(new, frags, p1 - last) # what didn't change
_pull([], frags, p2 - p1) # what got deleted
new.append((l, pos + 12)) # what got added
pos += l + 12
last = p2
frags.extend(reversed(new)) # what was left at the end
t = _collect(m, b2, frags)
m.seek(t[1])
return m.read(t[0])
def patchedsize(orig, delta):
outlen, last, bin = 0, 0, 0
binend = len(delta)
data = 12
while data <= binend:
decode = delta[bin:bin + 12]
start, end, length = struct.unpack(">lll", decode)
if start > end:
break
bin = data + length
data = bin + 12
outlen += start - last
last = end
outlen += length
if bin != binend:
raise mpatchError("patch cannot be decoded")
outlen += orig - last
return outlen