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verify: check the subrepository references in .hgsubstate...
verify: check the subrepository references in .hgsubstate While hopefully atypical, there are reasons that a subrepository revision can be lost that aren't covered by corruption of the .hgsubstate revlog. Such things can happen when a subrepo is amended, stripped or simply isn't pulled from upstream because the parent repo revision wasn't updated yet. There's no way to know if it is an error, but this will find potential problems sooner than when some random revision is updated. Until recently, convert made no attempt at rewriting the .hgsubstate file. The impetuous for this is to verify the conversion of some repositories, and this is orders of magnitude faster than a bash script from 0..tip that does an 'hg update -C $rev'. But it is equally useful to determine if everything has been pulled down before taking a thumb drive on the go. It feels somewhat wrong to leave this out of verifymod (mostly because the file is already read in there, and the final summary is printed before the subrepos are checked). But verifymod looks very low level, so importing subrepo stuff there seems more wrong.

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generate-working-copy-states.py
86 lines | 3.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
/ tests / generate-working-copy-states.py
# Helper script used for generating history and working copy files and content.
# The file's name corresponds to its history. The number of changesets can
# be specified on the command line. With 2 changesets, files with names like
# content1_content2_content1-untracked are generated. The first two filename
# segments describe the contents in the two changesets. The third segment
# ("content1-untracked") describes the state in the working copy, i.e.
# the file has content "content1" and is untracked (since it was previously
# tracked, it has been forgotten).
#
# This script generates the filenames and their content, but it's up to the
# caller to tell hg about the state.
#
# There are two subcommands:
# filelist <numchangesets>
# state <numchangesets> (<changeset>|wc)
#
# Typical usage:
#
# $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 1
# $ hg addremove --similarity 0
# $ hg commit -m 'first'
#
# $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 1
# $ hg addremove --similarity 0
# $ hg commit -m 'second'
#
# $ python $TESTDIR/generate-working-copy-states.py state 2 wc
# $ hg addremove --similarity 0
# $ hg forget *_*_*-untracked
# $ rm *_*_missing-*
import sys
import os
# Generates pairs of (filename, contents), where 'contents' is a list
# describing the file's content at each revision (or in the working copy).
# At each revision, it is either None or the file's actual content. When not
# None, it may be either new content or the same content as an earlier
# revisions, so all of (modified,clean,added,removed) can be tested.
def generatestates(maxchangesets, parentcontents):
depth = len(parentcontents)
if depth == maxchangesets + 1:
for tracked in ('untracked', 'tracked'):
filename = "_".join([(content is None and 'missing' or content) for
content in parentcontents]) + "-" + tracked
yield (filename, parentcontents)
else:
for content in (set([None, 'content' + str(depth + 1)]) |
set(parentcontents)):
for combination in generatestates(maxchangesets,
parentcontents + [content]):
yield combination
# retrieve the command line arguments
target = sys.argv[1]
maxchangesets = int(sys.argv[2])
if target == 'state':
depth = sys.argv[3]
# sort to make sure we have stable output
combinations = sorted(generatestates(maxchangesets, []))
# compute file content
content = []
for filename, states in combinations:
if target == 'filelist':
print filename
elif target == 'state':
if depth == 'wc':
# Make sure there is content so the file gets written and can be
# tracked. It will be deleted outside of this script.
content.append((filename, states[maxchangesets] or 'TOBEDELETED'))
else:
content.append((filename, states[int(depth) - 1]))
else:
print >> sys.stderr, "unknown target:", target
sys.exit(1)
# write actual content
for filename, data in content:
if data is not None:
f = open(filename, 'wb')
f.write(data + '\n')
f.close()
elif os.path.exists(filename):
os.remove(filename)