##// END OF EJS Templates
rebase: turn rebaseskipobsolete on by default...
rebase: turn rebaseskipobsolete on by default Consider the following use case. User has a set of commits he wants to rebase onto some destination. Some of the commits in the set are already rebased and their new versions are now among the ancestors of destination. Traditional rebase behavior would make the rebase and effectively try to apply older versions of these commits on top of newer versions, like this: a` --> b --> a` (where both 'a`' and 'a``' are rebased versions of 'a') This is not desired since 'b' might have made changes to 'a`' which can now result in merge conflicts. We can avoid these merge conflicts since we know that 'a``' is an older version of 'a`', so we don't even need to put it on top of 'b'. Rebaseskipobsolete allows us to do exactly that. Another undesired effect of a pure rebase is that now 'a`' and 'a``' are both successors to 'a' which is a divergence. We don't want that and not rebasing 'a' the second time allows to avoid it. This was not enabled by default initially because we wanted to have some more experience with it. After months of painless usages in multiple places, we are confident enough to turn it on my default.

File last commit:

r27225:30a20167 default
r28429:a4788168 default
Show More
__init__.py
144 lines | 5.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# __init__.py - Startup and module loading logic for Mercurial.
#
# Copyright 2015 Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@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 imp
import os
import sys
import zipimport
__all__ = []
# Rules for how modules can be loaded. Values are:
#
# c - require C extensions
# allow - allow pure Python implementation when C loading fails
# py - only load pure Python modules
modulepolicy = '@MODULELOADPOLICY@'
# By default, require the C extensions for performance reasons.
if modulepolicy == '@' 'MODULELOADPOLICY' '@':
modulepolicy = 'c'
# PyPy doesn't load C extensions.
#
# The canonical way to do this is to test platform.python_implementation().
# But we don't import platform and don't bloat for it here.
if '__pypy__' in sys.builtin_module_names:
modulepolicy = 'py'
# Environment variable can always force settings.
modulepolicy = os.environ.get('HGMODULEPOLICY', modulepolicy)
# Modules that have both Python and C implementations. See also the
# set of .py files under mercurial/pure/.
_dualmodules = set([
'mercurial.base85',
'mercurial.bdiff',
'mercurial.diffhelpers',
'mercurial.mpatch',
'mercurial.osutil',
'mercurial.parsers',
])
class hgimporter(object):
"""Object that conforms to import hook interface defined in PEP-302."""
def find_module(self, name, path=None):
# We only care about modules that have both C and pure implementations.
if name in _dualmodules:
return self
return None
def load_module(self, name):
mod = sys.modules.get(name, None)
if mod:
return mod
mercurial = sys.modules['mercurial']
# The zip importer behaves sufficiently differently from the default
# importer to warrant its own code path.
loader = getattr(mercurial, '__loader__', None)
if isinstance(loader, zipimport.zipimporter):
def ziploader(*paths):
"""Obtain a zipimporter for a directory under the main zip."""
path = os.path.join(loader.archive, *paths)
zl = sys.path_importer_cache.get(path)
if not zl:
zl = zipimport.zipimporter(path)
return zl
try:
if modulepolicy == 'py':
raise ImportError()
zl = ziploader('mercurial')
mod = zl.load_module(name)
# Unlike imp, ziploader doesn't expose module metadata that
# indicates the type of module. So just assume what we found
# is OK (even though it could be a pure Python module).
except ImportError:
if modulepolicy == 'c':
raise
zl = ziploader('mercurial', 'pure')
mod = zl.load_module(name)
sys.modules[name] = mod
return mod
# Unlike the default importer which searches special locations and
# sys.path, we only look in the directory where "mercurial" was
# imported from.
# imp.find_module doesn't support submodules (modules with ".").
# Instead you have to pass the parent package's __path__ attribute
# as the path argument.
stem = name.split('.')[-1]
try:
if modulepolicy == 'py':
raise ImportError()
modinfo = imp.find_module(stem, mercurial.__path__)
# The Mercurial installer used to copy files from
# mercurial/pure/*.py to mercurial/*.py. Therefore, it's possible
# for some installations to have .py files under mercurial/*.
# Loading Python modules when we expected C versions could result
# in a) poor performance b) loading a version from a previous
# Mercurial version, potentially leading to incompatibility. Either
# scenario is bad. So we verify that modules loaded from
# mercurial/* are C extensions. If the current policy allows the
# loading of .py modules, the module will be re-imported from
# mercurial/pure/* below.
if modinfo[2][2] != imp.C_EXTENSION:
raise ImportError('.py version of %s found where C '
'version should exist' % name)
except ImportError:
if modulepolicy == 'c':
raise
# Could not load the C extension and pure Python is allowed. So
# try to load them.
from . import pure
modinfo = imp.find_module(stem, pure.__path__)
if not modinfo:
raise ImportError('could not find mercurial module %s' %
name)
mod = imp.load_module(name, *modinfo)
sys.modules[name] = mod
return mod
# We automagically register our custom importer as a side-effect of loading.
# This is necessary to ensure that any entry points are able to import
# mercurial.* modules without having to perform this registration themselves.
if not any(isinstance(x, hgimporter) for x in sys.meta_path):
# meta_path is used before any implicit finders and before sys.path.
sys.meta_path.insert(0, hgimporter())