##// END OF EJS Templates
discovery: replace "heads" by "changesets" in a output note (BC)...
discovery: replace "heads" by "changesets" in a output note (BC) When using `hg push --rev X`, the subset considered by discovery is only `::X`. In addition, `X` can be any local revisions not just local heads. As a result the message "all local heads known locally" can be misleading. We replace it with the more accurate "all local changesets known remotely". The message appears when in verbose not, so this is stricly speaking a BC breakage. I am not sure this would be a real issue in practice...

File last commit:

r43109:ce6797ef default
r43154:775224e2 default
Show More
filepatterns.rs
125 lines | 4.0 KiB | application/rls-services+xml | RustLexer
// filepatterns.rs
//
// Copyright 2019, Georges Racinet <gracinet@anybox.fr>,
// Raphaël Gomès <rgomes@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::filepatterns` module provided by the
//! `hg-core` crate. From Python, this will be seen as `rustext.filepatterns`
//! and can be used as replacement for the the pure `filepatterns` Python
//! module.
//!
use crate::exceptions::{PatternError, PatternFileError};
use cpython::{
PyBytes, PyDict, PyModule, PyObject, PyResult, PyTuple, Python, ToPyObject,
};
use hg::{build_single_regex, read_pattern_file, LineNumber, PatternTuple};
/// Rust does not like functions with different return signatures.
/// The 3-tuple version is always returned by the hg-core function,
/// the (potential) conversion is handled at this level since it is not likely
/// to have any measurable impact on performance.
///
/// The Python implementation passes a function reference for `warn` instead
/// of a boolean that is used to emit warnings while parsing. The Rust
/// implementation chooses to accumulate the warnings and propagate them to
/// Python upon completion. See the `readpatternfile` function in `match.py`
/// for more details.
fn read_pattern_file_wrapper(
py: Python,
file_path: PyObject,
warn: bool,
source_info: bool,
) -> PyResult<PyTuple> {
match read_pattern_file(file_path.extract::<PyBytes>(py)?.data(py), warn) {
Ok((patterns, warnings)) => {
if source_info {
let itemgetter = |x: &PatternTuple| {
(PyBytes::new(py, &x.0), x.1, PyBytes::new(py, &x.2))
};
let results: Vec<(PyBytes, LineNumber, PyBytes)> =
patterns.iter().map(itemgetter).collect();
return Ok((results, warnings_to_py_bytes(py, &warnings))
.to_py_object(py));
}
let itemgetter = |x: &PatternTuple| PyBytes::new(py, &x.0);
let results: Vec<PyBytes> =
patterns.iter().map(itemgetter).collect();
Ok(
(results, warnings_to_py_bytes(py, &warnings))
.to_py_object(py),
)
}
Err(e) => Err(PatternFileError::pynew(py, e)),
}
}
fn warnings_to_py_bytes(
py: Python,
warnings: &[(Vec<u8>, Vec<u8>)],
) -> Vec<(PyBytes, PyBytes)> {
warnings
.iter()
.map(|(path, syn)| (PyBytes::new(py, path), PyBytes::new(py, syn)))
.collect()
}
fn build_single_regex_wrapper(
py: Python,
kind: PyObject,
pat: PyObject,
globsuffix: PyObject,
) -> PyResult<PyBytes> {
match build_single_regex(
kind.extract::<PyBytes>(py)?.data(py),
pat.extract::<PyBytes>(py)?.data(py),
globsuffix.extract::<PyBytes>(py)?.data(py),
) {
Ok(regex) => Ok(PyBytes::new(py, &regex)),
Err(e) => Err(PatternError::pynew(py, e)),
}
}
pub fn init_module(py: Python, package: &str) -> PyResult<PyModule> {
let dotted_name = &format!("{}.filepatterns", package);
let m = PyModule::new(py, dotted_name)?;
m.add(py, "__package__", package)?;
m.add(
py,
"__doc__",
"Patterns files parsing - Rust implementation",
)?;
m.add(
py,
"build_single_regex",
py_fn!(
py,
build_single_regex_wrapper(
kind: PyObject,
pat: PyObject,
globsuffix: PyObject
)
),
)?;
m.add(
py,
"read_pattern_file",
py_fn!(
py,
read_pattern_file_wrapper(
file_path: PyObject,
warn: bool,
source_info: bool
)
),
)?;
m.add(py, "PatternError", py.get_type::<PatternError>())?;
let sys = PyModule::import(py, "sys")?;
let sys_modules: PyDict = sys.get(py, "modules")?.extract(py)?;
sys_modules.set_item(py, dotted_name, &m)?;
Ok(m)
}