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rebase: turn rebase revs into set before filtering obsolete...
rebase: turn rebase revs into set before filtering obsolete When the inhibit extension from mutable-history is enabled, it attempts to iterate over the rebaseset to prevent the nodes being rebased from being marked obsolete. This happens at the same time as rebase's _filterobsoleterevs function trying to iterate over the rebaseset to figure out which ones are obsolete. The two of these iterating over the same revset generatorset cause a 'generator already executing' exception. This is probably a flaw in the revset implementation, since iterating over the same set twice should be supported. This regression was introduced in 5d16ebe7b14, since it changed _filterobsoleterevs to be called before the rebaseset was turned into a set(). For now let’s just make the rebaseset an actual set again before calling that function. This was caught by the inhibit tests. The relevant call stack from test-inhibit.t: File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/hgext/rebase.py", line 285, in _preparenewrebase obsrevs = _filterobsoleterevs(self.repo, rebaseset) File "/data/hgbuild/facebook-hg-rpms/mutable-history/hgext/inhibit.py", line 197, in _filterobsoleterevswrap r = orig(repo, rebasesetrevs, *args, **kwargs) File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/hgext/rebase.py", line 1380, in _filterobsoleterevs return set(r for r in revs if repo[r].obsolete()) File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/hgext/rebase.py", line 1380, in <genexpr> return set(r for r in revs if repo[r].obsolete()) File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/revset.py", line 3079, in _iterordered val2 = next(iter2) File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/revset.py", line 3417, in gen yield nextrev() File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/revset.py", line 3424, in _consumegen for item in self._gen: File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/revset.py", line 71, in iterate cl = repo.changelog File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/repoview.py", line 319, in changelog revs = filterrevs(unfi, self.filtername) File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/repoview.py", line 261, in filterrevs repo.filteredrevcache[filtername] = func(repo.unfiltered()) File "/data/hgbuild/facebook-hg-rpms/mutable-history/hgext/directaccess.py", line 65, in _computehidden hidden = repoview.filterrevs(repo, 'visible') File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/repoview.py", line 261, in filterrevs repo.filteredrevcache[filtername] = func(repo.unfiltered()) File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/repoview.py", line 175, in computehidden hideable = hideablerevs(repo) File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/repoview.py", line 33, in hideablerevs return obsolete.getrevs(repo, 'obsolete') File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/obsolete.py", line 1097, in getrevs repo.obsstore.caches[name] = cachefuncs[name](repo) File "/data/hgbuild/facebook-hg-rpms/mutable-history/hgext/inhibit.py", line 255, in _computeobsoleteset if getrev(n) not in blacklist: File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/revset.py", line 3264, in __contains__ return x in self._r1 or x in self._r2 File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/revset.py", line 3348, in __contains__ for l in self._consumegen(): File "/tmp/hgtests.jgjrN5/install/lib/python/mercurial/revset.py", line 3424, in _consumegen for item in self._gen: ValueError: generator already executing

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revsets.txt
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Mercurial supports a functional language for selecting a set of
revisions.
The language supports a number of predicates which are joined by infix
operators. Parenthesis can be used for grouping.
Identifiers such as branch names may need quoting with single or
double quotes if they contain characters like ``-`` or if they match
one of the predefined predicates.
Special characters can be used in quoted identifiers by escaping them,
e.g., ``\n`` is interpreted as a newline. To prevent them from being
interpreted, strings can be prefixed with ``r``, e.g. ``r'...'``.
There is a single prefix operator:
``not x``
Changesets not in x. Short form is ``! x``.
These are the supported infix operators:
``x::y``
A DAG range, meaning all changesets that are descendants of x and
ancestors of y, including x and y themselves. If the first endpoint
is left out, this is equivalent to ``ancestors(y)``, if the second
is left out it is equivalent to ``descendants(x)``.
An alternative syntax is ``x..y``.
``x:y``
All changesets with revision numbers between x and y, both
inclusive. Either endpoint can be left out, they default to 0 and
tip.
``x and y``
The intersection of changesets in x and y. Short form is ``x & y``.
``x or y``
The union of changesets in x and y. There are two alternative short
forms: ``x | y`` and ``x + y``.
``x - y``
Changesets in x but not in y.
``x % y``
Changesets that are ancestors of x but not ancestors of y (i.e. ::x - ::y).
This is shorthand notation for ``only(x, y)`` (see below). The second
argument is optional and, if left out, is equivalent to ``only(x)``.
``x^n``
The nth parent of x, n == 0, 1, or 2.
For n == 0, x; for n == 1, the first parent of each changeset in x;
for n == 2, the second parent of changeset in x.
``x~n``
The nth first ancestor of x; ``x~0`` is x; ``x~3`` is ``x^^^``.
There is a single postfix operator:
``x^``
Equivalent to ``x^1``, the first parent of each changeset in x.
The following predicates are supported:
.. predicatesmarker
New predicates (known as "aliases") can be defined, using any combination of
existing predicates or other aliases. An alias definition looks like::
<alias> = <definition>
in the ``revsetalias`` section of a Mercurial configuration file. Arguments
of the form `a1`, `a2`, etc. are substituted from the alias into the
definition.
For example,
::
[revsetalias]
h = heads()
d(s) = sort(s, date)
rs(s, k) = reverse(sort(s, k))
defines three aliases, ``h``, ``d``, and ``rs``. ``rs(0:tip, author)`` is
exactly equivalent to ``reverse(sort(0:tip, author))``.
An infix operator ``##`` can concatenate strings and identifiers into
one string. For example::
[revsetalias]
issue(a1) = grep(r'\bissue[ :]?' ## a1 ## r'\b|\bbug\(' ## a1 ## r'\)')
``issue(1234)`` is equivalent to ``grep(r'\bissue[ :]?1234\b|\bbug\(1234\)')``
in this case. This matches against all of "issue 1234", "issue:1234",
"issue1234" and "bug(1234)".
All other prefix, infix and postfix operators have lower priority than
``##``. For example, ``a1 ## a2~2`` is equivalent to ``(a1 ## a2)~2``.
Command line equivalents for :hg:`log`::
-f -> ::.
-d x -> date(x)
-k x -> keyword(x)
-m -> merge()
-u x -> user(x)
-b x -> branch(x)
-P x -> !::x
-l x -> limit(expr, x)
Some sample queries:
- Changesets on the default branch::
hg log -r "branch(default)"
- Changesets on the default branch since tag 1.5 (excluding merges)::
hg log -r "branch(default) and 1.5:: and not merge()"
- Open branch heads::
hg log -r "head() and not closed()"
- Changesets between tags 1.3 and 1.5 mentioning "bug" that affect
``hgext/*``::
hg log -r "1.3::1.5 and keyword(bug) and file('hgext/*')"
- Changesets committed in May 2008, sorted by user::
hg log -r "sort(date('May 2008'), user)"
- Changesets mentioning "bug" or "issue" that are not in a tagged
release::
hg log -r "(keyword(bug) or keyword(issue)) and not ancestors(tag())"