##// END OF EJS Templates
namespaces: let namespaces override singlenode() definition...
namespaces: let namespaces override singlenode() definition Some namespaces have multiple nodes per name (meaning that their namemap() returns multiple nodes). One such namespace is the "topics" namespace (from the evolve repo). We also have our own internal namespace at Google (for review units) that has multiple nodes per name. These namespaces may not want to use the default "pick highest revnum" resolution that we currently use when resolving a name to a single node. As an example, they may decide that `hg co <name>` should check out a commit that's last in some sense even if an earlier commit had just been amended and thus had a higher revnum [1]. This patch gives the namespace the option to continue to return multiple nodes and to override how the best node is picked. Allowing namespaces to override that may also be useful as an optimization (it may be cheaper for the namespace to find just that node). I have been arguing (in D3715) for using all the nodes returned from namemap() when resolving the symbol to a revset, so e.g. `hg log -r stable` would resolve to *all* nodes on stable, not just the one with the highest revnum (except that I don't actually think we should change it for the branch namespace because of BC). Most people seem opposed to that. If we decide not to do it, I think we can deprecate the namemap() function in favor of the new singlenode() (I find it weird to have namespaces, like the branch namespace, where namemap() isn't nodemap()'s inverse). I therefore think this patch makes sense regardless of what we decide on that issue. [1] Actually, even the branch namespace would have wanted to override singlenode() if it had supported multiple nodes. That's because closes branch heads are mostly ignored, so "hg co default" will not check out the highest-revnum node if that's a closed head. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D3852

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similar.py
121 lines | 4.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# similar.py - mechanisms for finding similar files
#
# Copyright 2005-2007 Matt Mackall <mpm@selenic.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
from .i18n import _
from . import (
mdiff,
)
def _findexactmatches(repo, added, removed):
'''find renamed files that have no changes
Takes a list of new filectxs and a list of removed filectxs, and yields
(before, after) tuples of exact matches.
'''
# Build table of removed files: {hash(fctx.data()): [fctx, ...]}.
# We use hash() to discard fctx.data() from memory.
hashes = {}
progress = repo.ui.makeprogress(_('searching for exact renames'),
total=(len(added) + len(removed)),
unit=_('files'))
for fctx in removed:
progress.increment()
h = hash(fctx.data())
if h not in hashes:
hashes[h] = [fctx]
else:
hashes[h].append(fctx)
# For each added file, see if it corresponds to a removed file.
for fctx in added:
progress.increment()
adata = fctx.data()
h = hash(adata)
for rfctx in hashes.get(h, []):
# compare between actual file contents for exact identity
if adata == rfctx.data():
yield (rfctx, fctx)
break
# Done
progress.complete()
def _ctxdata(fctx):
# lazily load text
orig = fctx.data()
return orig, mdiff.splitnewlines(orig)
def _score(fctx, otherdata):
orig, lines = otherdata
text = fctx.data()
# mdiff.blocks() returns blocks of matching lines
# count the number of bytes in each
equal = 0
matches = mdiff.blocks(text, orig)
for x1, x2, y1, y2 in matches:
for line in lines[y1:y2]:
equal += len(line)
lengths = len(text) + len(orig)
return equal * 2.0 / lengths
def score(fctx1, fctx2):
return _score(fctx1, _ctxdata(fctx2))
def _findsimilarmatches(repo, added, removed, threshold):
'''find potentially renamed files based on similar file content
Takes a list of new filectxs and a list of removed filectxs, and yields
(before, after, score) tuples of partial matches.
'''
copies = {}
progress = repo.ui.makeprogress(_('searching for similar files'),
unit=_('files'), total=len(removed))
for r in removed:
progress.increment()
data = None
for a in added:
bestscore = copies.get(a, (None, threshold))[1]
if data is None:
data = _ctxdata(r)
myscore = _score(a, data)
if myscore > bestscore:
copies[a] = (r, myscore)
progress.complete()
for dest, v in copies.iteritems():
source, bscore = v
yield source, dest, bscore
def _dropempty(fctxs):
return [x for x in fctxs if x.size() > 0]
def findrenames(repo, added, removed, threshold):
'''find renamed files -- yields (before, after, score) tuples'''
wctx = repo[None]
pctx = wctx.p1()
# Zero length files will be frequently unrelated to each other, and
# tracking the deletion/addition of such a file will probably cause more
# harm than good. We strip them out here to avoid matching them later on.
addedfiles = _dropempty(wctx[fp] for fp in sorted(added))
removedfiles = _dropempty(pctx[fp] for fp in sorted(removed) if fp in pctx)
# Find exact matches.
matchedfiles = set()
for (a, b) in _findexactmatches(repo, addedfiles, removedfiles):
matchedfiles.add(b)
yield (a.path(), b.path(), 1.0)
# If the user requested similar files to be matched, search for them also.
if threshold < 1.0:
addedfiles = [x for x in addedfiles if x not in matchedfiles]
for (a, b, score) in _findsimilarmatches(repo, addedfiles,
removedfiles, threshold):
yield (a.path(), b.path(), score)