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dirstate: drop explicit files that shouldn't match (BC) (issue4679)...
dirstate: drop explicit files that shouldn't match (BC) (issue4679) Before, wctx.walk() could include files excluded by -X pattern, which disagrees with wctx.matches() and ctx.walk()/matches() behavior. This patch fixes the problem by testing stat results against the matcher if the matcher may contain false paths. I have no idea if the fix should be made before the workaround for case- insensitive filesystems, but that shouldn't matter since match.anypats() means 'not match.isexact()'. This patch also makes narrow and sparse extensions to not exclude explicit paths on walk() because they appear to depend on the buggy behavior. More detailed analysis about this issue by Martin von Zweigbergk: "I think it's just an unintended consequence of how the dirstate walk works, but I'm not sure. The exception for explicit files also bothered me when I was working on the matcher code a year or so ago. I actually added the exception to the matcher code because I thought it was always working like that (not just for dirstate) in a83a7d27911e (match: handle excludes using new differencematcher, 2017-05-16). It was only recently that Yuya realized that it used to be inconsistent and that I probably made it consistently bad because I didn't realize it was inconsistent to start with, see 821d8a5ab4ff (match: do not weirdly include explicit files excluded by -X option, 2018-01-16)." .. bc:: Working-directory commands now respect ``-X PATTERN`` no matter if PATTERN matches explicitly-specified FILEs. For example, ``hg add foo -X foo`` no longer add the file ``foo``.

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_compat.py
90 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
import sys
import types
PY2 = sys.version_info[0] == 2
if PY2:
from UserDict import IterableUserDict
# We 'bundle' isclass instead of using inspect as importing inspect is
# fairly expensive (order of 10-15 ms for a modern machine in 2016)
def isclass(klass):
return isinstance(klass, (type, types.ClassType))
# TYPE is used in exceptions, repr(int) is different on Python 2 and 3.
TYPE = "type"
def iteritems(d):
return d.iteritems()
def iterkeys(d):
return d.iterkeys()
# Python 2 is bereft of a read-only dict proxy, so we make one!
class ReadOnlyDict(IterableUserDict):
"""
Best-effort read-only dict wrapper.
"""
def __setitem__(self, key, val):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise TypeError("'mappingproxy' object does not support item "
"assignment")
def update(self, _):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'update'")
def __delitem__(self, _):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise TypeError("'mappingproxy' object does not support item "
"deletion")
def clear(self):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'clear'")
def pop(self, key, default=None):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'pop'")
def popitem(self):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'popitem'")
def setdefault(self, key, default=None):
# We gently pretend we're a Python 3 mappingproxy.
raise AttributeError("'mappingproxy' object has no attribute "
"'setdefault'")
def __repr__(self):
# Override to be identical to the Python 3 version.
return "mappingproxy(" + repr(self.data) + ")"
def metadata_proxy(d):
res = ReadOnlyDict()
res.data.update(d) # We blocked update, so we have to do it like this.
return res
else:
def isclass(klass):
return isinstance(klass, type)
TYPE = "class"
def iteritems(d):
return d.items()
def iterkeys(d):
return d.keys()
def metadata_proxy(d):
return types.MappingProxyType(dict(d))