##// END OF EJS Templates
help: don't try to render a section on sub-topics...
help: don't try to render a section on sub-topics This patch subtly changes the behavior of the parsing of "X.Y" values to not set the "section" variable when rendering a known sub-topic. Previously, "section" would be the same as the sub-topic name. This required the sub-topic RST to have a section named the same as the sub-topic name. When I made this change, the descriptions from help.internalstable started being rendered in command line output. This didn't look correct to me, as it didn't match the formatting of main help pages. I corrected this by moving the top section to help.internalstable and changing the section levels of all the "internals" topics. The end result is that "internals" topics now match the rendering of main topics on both the CLI and HTML. And, "internals" topics no longer require a main section matching the name of the topic.

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policy.py
45 lines | 1.4 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# policy.py - module policy 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 os
import sys
# Rules for how modules can be loaded. Values are:
#
# c - require C extensions
# allow - allow pure Python implementation when C loading fails
# cffi - required cffi versions (implemented within pure module)
# cffi-allow - allow pure Python implementation if cffi version is missing
# py - only load pure Python modules
#
# By default, require the C extensions for performance reasons.
policy = 'c'
policynoc = ('cffi', 'cffi-allow', 'py')
policynocffi = ('c', 'py')
try:
from . import __modulepolicy__
policy = __modulepolicy__.modulepolicy
except ImportError:
pass
# 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:
policy = 'cffi'
# Our C extensions aren't yet compatible with Python 3. So use pure Python
# on Python 3 for now.
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
policy = 'py'
# Environment variable can always force settings.
policy = os.environ.get('HGMODULEPOLICY', policy)