`jj sparse` is a bit different from other commands in that its `jj
sparse --list` is practically a separate command. Let's make it an
actual subcommand for consistency, and so we can more cleanly add
additional flags for `jj sparse list` in the future. I moved all the
other arguments to `jj sparse set`. I'm not sure if `jj sparse set
--reset` would have been better as `jj sparse reset`, but it is
technically just updating the sparse patterns just like the other
arguments (`--clear`, `--add` , `--remove`).
This bug concerns the way `import_refs` that gets called by `fetch` computes
the heads that should be visible after the import.
Previously, the list of such heads was computed *before* local branches were
updated based on changes to the remote branches. So, commits that should have
been abandoned based on this update of the local branches weren't properly
abandoned.
Now, `import_refs` tracks the heads that need to be visible because of some ref
in a mapping keyed by the ref. If the ref moves or is deleted, the
corresponding heads are updated.
Fixes#864
This adds a config called `revsets.short-prefixes`, which lets the
user specify a revset in which to disambiguate otherwise ambiguous
change/commit ids. It defaults to the value of `revsets.log`.
I made it so you can disable the feature by setting
`revsets.short-prefixes = ""`. I don't like that the default value
(using `revsets.log`) cannot be configured explicitly by the
user. That will be addressed if we decide to merge the `[revsets]` and
`[revset-aliases]` sections some day.
I plan to add `revsets.short-prefixes` and `revsets.immutable` soon,
and I think `[revsets]` seems like reasonable place to put them. It
seems consistent with our `[templates]` section. However, it also
suffers from the same problem as that section, which is that the
difference between `[templates]` and `[template-aliases]` is not
clear. We can decide about about templates and revsets later.
The current behavior was introduced by 20eb9ecec1 "git: don't abandon
HEAD commit when it loses a branch." While the change made HEAD mutation
behavior more consistent with a plain ref operation, HEAD can also move on
checkout, and checkout shouldn't be considered a history rewriting operation.
I'm not saying the new behavior is always correct, but I think it's safer
than losing old HEAD branch. I also think this change will help if we want
to extract HEAD management function from git::import_refs().
Fixes#1042.
Establishing a unique file extension for the temporary files created
via `jj describe` helps to ensure that text editors can recognize the
filetype and alter settings accordingly. This will open the door for
an improved user experience, and allow for setting things like the
appropriate text-width/rulers, syntax highlighting of the diff summary
(see Git's commit tree-sitter grammer [1]), easy toggling of the `JJ:`
comment lines, etc.
I examined the behavior of filetype detection across a number of
common text editors, and the most universally-support mechanism was
to have a unique extension that does not include any periods. Meaning
that namespacing via something like `.jj.txt` instead, won't always be
detected due to inconsistent matching prioritization across editors.
It also makes sense to assume that we may want other Jujutsu-specific
filetypes in the future.
The filename prefix has also been switched to be `editor-` for clarity,
as well as to ease matching a glob-pattern if we ever need to garbage
collect leftover tempfiles. This structure is similar to what Mercurial
and Sapling do as well.
[1] https://github.com/the-mikedavis/tree-sitter-git-commit
This is a convenience optimization to improve the default user
experience, since `jj log` is a frequently run command. Accessing the
help information explicitly still follows normal CLI conventions, and
instructions are displayed appropriately if the user happens to make a
mistake. Discoverability should not be adversely harmed.
Note that this behavior mirrors what Sapling does [2], where `sl` will
display the smartlog by default.
[1] https://github.com/clap-rs/clap/issues/975
[2] https://sapling-scm.com/docs/overview/smartlog
I wasn't quite happy with `jj support` but I couldn't think of
anything better when I moved the commands from `jj debug` in
e2b4d7058d. Thanks to @ilyagr for suggesting `jj util`.
The `heads()` revset function with one argument is the counterpart to
`roots()`. Without arguments, it returns the visible heads in the
repo, i.e. `heads(all())`. The two use cases are quite different, and
I think it would be good to clarify that the no-arg form returns the
visible heads, so let's split that out to a new `visible_heads()`
function.
This serves the role of limit() in Mercurial. Since revsets in JJ is
(conceptually) an unordered set, a "limit" predicate should define its
ordering criteria. That's why the added predicate is named as "latest".
Closes#1110
I think requests to reset the author came up twice in the last week,
so let's just add support for it. I copied git's behavior of resetting
the name, email, and timestamp. The flag name is also from git.
We need 1.64 to bump `clap` to `4.1`. We don't really need to upgrade
to that, but being on an older version causes minor confusions like
#1393. Rust 1.64 is very close to 6 months old at this point.
The `jj debug` commands are hidden from help and are described as
"Low-level commands not intended for users", but e.g. `jj debug
completion` is intended for users, and should be visible in the help
output.
By using one letter for the path type before and one letter for path
type after, we can encode much more information than just the current
'M'/'A'/'R'. In particular, we can indicate new and resolved
conflicts. The color still encodes the same information as before. The
output looks a bit weird after many years of using `hg status`. It's a
bit more similar to the `git status -s` format with one letter for the
index and one with the working copy. Will we get used to it and find
it useful?
@joyously found `o` confusing because it's a valid change id prefix. I
don't have much preference, but `●` seems fine. The "ascii",
"ascii-large", and "legacy" graph styles still use "o".
I didn't change `@` since it seems useful to have that match the
symbol used on the CLI. I don't think we want to have users do
something like `jj co ◎-`.
Unlike Mercurial, this isn't a template keyword/function, but a config knob.
Exposing graph_width to templater wouldn't be easy, and I don't think it's
better to handle terminal wrapping in template.
I'm not sure if patch content should be wrapped, so this option only applies
to the template output for now.
Closes#1043
This eliminates ambiguous parsing between "func()" and "expr ()".
I chose "++" as template concatenation operator in case we want to add
bit-wise negate operator. It's also easier to find/replace than "~".
Since there's no easy API to snapshot the stale working copy without releasing
the lock, we have to compare the tree ids after reacquiring the lock. We could
instead manually snapshot and rebase the working-copy commit, but that would
require more copy-paste codes.
Closes#1310
The outermost "op-log" label isn't moved to the default template. I think
it belongs to the command's formatter rather than the template.
Old bikeshedding items:
- "current_head", "is_head", or "is_head_op"
=> renamed to "current_operation"
- "templates.op-log" vs "templates.op_log" (the whole template is labeled
as "op-log")
=> renamed to "op_log"
- "template-aliases.'format_operation_duration(time_range)'"
=> renamed to 'format_time_range(time_range)'
We write conflict to the working copy by materializing them as
conflict markers in a file. When the file has been modified (or just
the mtime has changed), we parse the markers to reconstruct the
conflict. For example, let's say we see this conflict marker:
```
<<<<<<<
+++++++
b
%%%%%%%
-a
+c
>>>>>>>
```
Then we will create a hunk with ["a"] as removed and ["b", "c"] as
added.
Now, since commit b84be06c08, when we materialize conflicts, we
minimize the diff part of the marker (the `%%%%%%%` part). The problem
is that that minimization may result in a different order of the
positive conflict terms. That's particularly bad because we do the
minimization per hunk, so we can end up reconstructing an input that
never existed.
This commit fixes the bug by only considering the next add and the one
after that, and emitting either only the first with `%%%%%%%`, or both
of them, with the first one in `++++++++` and the second one in
`%%%%%%%`.
Note that the recent fix to add context to modify/delete conflicts
means that when we parse modified such conflicts, we'll always
consider them resolved, since the expected adds/removes we pass will
not match what's actually in the file. That doesn't seem so bad, and
it's not obvious what the fix should be, so I'll leave that for later.
When we materialize modify/delete conflicts, we currently don't
include any context lines. That's because modify/delete conflicts have
only two sides, so there's no common base to compare to. Hunks that
are unchanged on the "modify" side are therefore not considered
conflicting, and since they they don't contribute new changes, they're
simply skipped (here:
3dfedf5814/lib/src/files.rs (L228-L230)).
It seems more useful to instead pretend that the missing side is an
empty file. That way we'll get a conflict in the entire file.
We can still decide later to make e.g. `jj resolve` prompt the user on
modify/delete conflicts just like `hg resolve` does (or maybe it
actually happens earlier there, I don't remember).
Closes#1244.
It's been about 10 weeks and 730 commits since 0.6.0, compared to
about 7 weeks and 350 commits between 0.5.0 and 0.6.0, so it's time
for a new release. There's been significant user-visible changes and
code-quality improvements. Thanks, everyone!