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merge: don't try to merge subrepos twice (issue4988)...
merge: don't try to merge subrepos twice (issue4988) In my patch series ending with rev 25e4b2f000c5 I switched most change/delete conflicts to be handled at the resolve layer. .hgsubstate was the one file that we weren't able to handle, so we kept the old code path around for it. The old code path added .hgsubstate to one of the other lists as the user specifies, including possibly the 'g' list. Now since we did this check after converting the actions from being keyed by file to being keyed by action type, there was nothing that actually removed .hgsubstate from the 'cd' or 'dc' lists. This meant that the file would eventually make its way into the 'mergeactions' list, now freshly augmented with 'cd' and 'dc' actions. We call subrepo.submerge for both 'g' actions and merge actions. This means that if the resolution to an .hgsubstate change/delete conflict was to add it to the 'g' list, subrepo.submerge would be called twice. It turns out that this doesn't cause any adverse effects on Linux due to caching, but apparently breaks on other operating systems including Windows. The fix here moves this to before we convert the actions over. This ensures that it .hgsubstate doesn't make its way into multiple lists. The real fix here is going to be: (1) move .hgsubstate conflict resolution into the resolve layer, and (2) use a real data structure for the actions rather than shuffling data around between lists and dictionaries: we need a hash (or prefix-based) index by file and a list index by action type. There's a very tiny behavior change here: collision detection on case-insensitive systems will happen after this is resolved, not before. I think this is the right change -- .hgsubstate could theoretically collide with other files -- but in any case it makes no practical difference. Thanks to Yuya Nishihara for investigating this.

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py3kcompat.py
68 lines | 2.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# py3kcompat.py - compatibility definitions for running hg in py3k
#
# Copyright 2010 Renato Cunha <renatoc@gmail.com>
#
# 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 builtins
import numbers
Number = numbers.Number
def bytesformatter(format, args):
'''Custom implementation of a formatter for bytestrings.
This function currently relies on the string formatter to do the
formatting and always returns bytes objects.
>>> bytesformatter(20, 10)
0
>>> bytesformatter('unicode %s, %s!', ('string', 'foo'))
b'unicode string, foo!'
>>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', 'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter('test %s', 'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter(b'test %s', b'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter('test %s', b'me')
b'test me'
>>> bytesformatter('test %d: %s', (1, b'result'))
b'test 1: result'
'''
# The current implementation just converts from bytes to unicode, do
# what's needed and then convert the results back to bytes.
# Another alternative is to use the Python C API implementation.
if isinstance(format, Number):
# If the fixer erroneously passes a number remainder operation to
# bytesformatter, we just return the correct operation
return format % args
if isinstance(format, bytes):
format = format.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
if isinstance(args, bytes):
args = args.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
if isinstance(args, tuple):
newargs = []
for arg in args:
if isinstance(arg, bytes):
arg = arg.decode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
newargs.append(arg)
args = tuple(newargs)
ret = format % args
return ret.encode('utf-8', 'surrogateescape')
builtins.bytesformatter = bytesformatter
origord = builtins.ord
def fakeord(char):
if isinstance(char, int):
return char
return origord(char)
builtins.ord = fakeord
if __name__ == '__main__':
import doctest
doctest.testmod()