##// END OF EJS Templates
filemerge: add internal merge tool to dump files forcibly...
filemerge: add internal merge tool to dump files forcibly Internal merge tool :dump implies premerge. Therefore, files aren't dumped, if premerge runs successfully. This undocumented behavior might confuse users, if they want to always dump files. But just making :dump omit premerge might cause backward compatibility issue for existing automation. This patch adds new internal merge tool :forcedump, which works as same as :dump, but omits premerge always. Internal tools annotated with "nomerge" should merge "change and delete" correctly, but _forcedump() can't. Therefore, it is annotated with "mergeonly" to always omit premerge, even though it doesn't merge files actually. This patch also adds explanation about premerge to :dump, to clarify how :dump actually works. BTW, this patch specifies internal tools with "internal:" prefix in newly added test scenario in test-merge-tools.t, even though this prefix is already deprecated. This is only for similarity to other tests in test-merge-tools.t.

File last commit:

r30559:d83ca854 default
r32255:7e35d31b default
Show More
test-duplicateoptions.py
41 lines | 1.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
/ tests / test-duplicateoptions.py
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function
import os
from mercurial import (
commands,
extensions,
ui as uimod,
)
ignore = set(['highlight', 'win32text', 'factotum'])
if os.name != 'nt':
ignore.add('win32mbcs')
disabled = [ext for ext in extensions.disabled().keys() if ext not in ignore]
hgrc = open(os.environ["HGRCPATH"], 'w')
hgrc.write('[extensions]\n')
for ext in disabled:
hgrc.write(ext + '=\n')
hgrc.close()
u = uimod.ui.load()
extensions.loadall(u)
globalshort = set()
globallong = set()
for option in commands.globalopts:
option[0] and globalshort.add(option[0])
option[1] and globallong.add(option[1])
for cmd, entry in commands.table.iteritems():
seenshort = globalshort.copy()
seenlong = globallong.copy()
for option in entry[1]:
if (option[0] and option[0] in seenshort) or \
(option[1] and option[1] in seenlong):
print("command '" + cmd + "' has duplicate option " + str(option))
seenshort.add(option[0])
seenlong.add(option[1])