The id.shortest() template prints a warning and falls back to repo-global
resolution. This seems better than erroring out. There are a few edge cases
in which the short-prefixes resolution can fail unexpectedly. For example, the
trunk() revision might not exist in operations before "jj git clone".
These flags only apply to line-based diffs. This is easy, and seems still useful
to highlight whitespace changes (that could be ignored by line diffing.)
I've added short options only to "diff"-like commands. It seemed unclear if
they were added to deeply-nested commands such as "op log".
Closes#3781
When `format_short_signature(signature)` is set to `signature.name()` the author names are not yellow like other signature types (eg email and username). When the commit signatures have no colors, they blend in making it hard to distinguish between signatures and commit messages.
If just `name` were set to `yellow`, just like email and username, it affects the colorization of branch names making them also yellow despite them being designated as magenta. Setting `author` and `committer` to `yellow` is specific enough to allow branches to keep their colors while still coloring signature names. This is known to affect signatures in both 'log' and 'show'.
Let the user select all changes interactively and put them into
the first commit, and create a second commit with the possibility
of preserving the current commit message. This was previously only
possible in non-interactive mode by specifying matching paths, e.g.
".". In both cases, a warning will be issued indicating that the second
commit is empty.
Move this update under `Unreleased`. I started the change before the last
release and after rebasing, forgot to move it. Fixing it now thanks to @yuja
catching this on time.
Issue: #4122
See discussion thread in linked issue.
With this PR, all revset functions in [BUILTIN_FUNCTION_MAP](8d166c7642/lib/src/revset.rs (L570))
that return multiple values are either named in plural or the naming is hard to misunderstand (e.g. `reachable`)
Fixes: #4122
* See #4239 for details.
* For now, update working copy before reporting repo changes, so that
potential errors in reporting changes don't leave the repo in a stale
state.
Fixes: #4239
* First fetch from remote.
* Then check tx.{base_repo(),repo}.view().remote_bookmarks_matching(<branch>, <remote>).
This has to happen after the fetch has been done so the tx.repo() is updated.
* Warn if a branch is not found in any of the remotes used in the fetch. Note that the remotes
used in the fetch can be a subset of the remotes configured for the repo, so the language
of the warning tries to point that out.
Fixes: #4293
This makes it easier to work with multiple remotes at once while
tracking the default branch of the remote used to create the local
repository:
```shell
$ jj git clone --remote upstream https://github.com/upstream-org/repo
$ cd repo
$ jj git remote add origin git@github.com:your-org/repo
$ jj config set --repo git.fetch upstream
```
In the example above, `upstream` is the repository containing the
reference source code that you might want to patch, while `origin` is
your fork where pull-request will be pushed. The branch `main@upstream`
will be tracked.
This is basically "log -p" for "op log". The flag name has "op" because --diff
and --patch mean a similar thing in this context. Since -p implies --op-diff,
user can just do "op log -p" if he's okay with verbose op + content diffs.
Note that --no-graph affects both "op log" and "op diff" parts.
We might want to do some style changes later, such as inserting/deleting blank
lines, highlighting headers, etc.
Jujutsu's branches do not behave like Git branches, which is a major
hurdle for people adopting it from Git. They rather behave like
Mercurial's (hg) bookmarks.
We've had multiple discussions about it in the last ~1.5 years about this rename in the Discord,
where multiple people agreed that this _false_ familiarity does not help anyone. Initially we were
reluctant to do it but overtime, more and more users agreed that `bookmark` was a better for name
the current mechanism. This may be hard break for current `jj branch` users, but it will immensly
help Jujutsu's future, by defining it as our first own term. The `[experimental-moving-branches]`
config option is currently left alone, to force not another large config update for
users, since the last time this happened was when `jj log -T show` was removed, which immediately
resulted in breaking users and introduced soft deprecations.
This name change will also make it easier to introduce Topics (#3402) as _topological branches_
with a easier model.
This was mostly done via LSP, ripgrep and sed and a whole bunch of manual changes either from
me being lazy or thankfully pointed out by reviewers.
`jj new <commit>` automatically adds the checked out commits into the view head ids. However,
`jj edit` does not.
To reproduce:
```
jj git init test
cd test
jj commit -m "my commit"
jj log -r @- -T commit_id # Save the id
jj abandon -r @-
jj edit <saved_id>
jj log -r :: # Does not show the currently editing commit
```
It's a pretty frequent request to have support for turning off
auto-tracking of new files and to have a command to manually track
them instead. This patch adds a `snapshot.auto-track` config to decide
which paths to auto-track (defaults to `all()`). It also adds a `jj
track` command to manually track the untracked paths.
This patch does not include displaying the untracked paths in `jj
status`, so for now this is probably only useful in colocated repos
where you can run `git status` to find the untracked files.
#323
This flag implements three modes:
- `copy`: copy sparse patterns from parent
- `full`: do not copy sparse patterns from parent
- `empty`: clear all paths, equal to `set --clear`
This is useful for various tooling like tools that want to run a parallel
process that queries the build system (without running into locks/blocking.)
I think continuing to copy sparse patterns makes sense as the default behavior.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
This enables workflows like "insert a commit that reformats the code in one of
my project directories".
`jj fix --include-unchanged-files` is an easy way to fix everything in the repo.
`jj fix --include-unchanged-files <file...>` fixes all of the `<files>` even if they are
unchanged.
This is mostly orthogonal to other features, so not many tests are added.
This is a significant and simple enough improvement that I think it's
appropriate to make it here instead of waiting for a `jj run`-based solution.
It seems everyone agrees that `obslog` is not an intuitive name. There
was some discussion about alternatives in #3592 and on #4146. The
alternatives included `evolution`, `evolutionlog`, `evolog`,
`rewritelog`, `revlog`, and `changelog`. It seemed like
`evolution-log`/`evolog` was the most popular option. That also
matches the command's current help text ("Show how a change has
evolved over time").
I played with max-inline-alternation = 3 for a couple of weeks, and it's pretty
good. I think somewhere between 2 and 4 is good default because one or two
remove + add sequences are easy to parse.
In this patch, I use the number of adds<->removes alternation as a threshold,
which approximates the visual complexity of diff hunks. I don't think user can
choose the threshold intuitively, but we need a config knob to try out some.
I set `max-inline-alternation = 3` locally. 0 and 1 mean "disable inlining"
and "inline adds-only/removes-only lines" respectively.
I've added "diff.<format>" config namespace assuming "ui.diff" will be
reorganized as "ui.diff-formatter" or something. #3327
Some other metrics I've tried:
```
// Per-line alternation. This also works well, but can't measure complexity of
// changes across lines.
fn count_max_diff_alternation_per_line(diff_lines: &[DiffLine]) -> usize {
diff_lines
.iter()
.map(|line| {
let sides = line.hunks.iter().map(|&(side, _)| side);
sides
.filter(|&side| side != DiffLineHunkSide::Both)
.dedup() // omit e.g. left->both->left
.count()
})
.max()
.unwrap_or(0)
}
// Per-line occupancy of changes. Large diffs don't always look complex.
fn max_diff_token_ratio_per_line(diff_lines: &[DiffLine]) -> f32 {
diff_lines
.iter()
.filter_map(|line| {
let [both_len, left_len, right_len] =
line.hunks.iter().fold([0, 0, 0], |mut acc, (side, data)| {
let index = match side {
DiffLineHunkSide::Both => 0,
DiffLineHunkSide::Left => 1,
DiffLineHunkSide::Right => 2,
};
acc[index] += data.len();
acc
});
// left/right-only change is readable
(left_len != 0 && right_len != 0).then(|| {
let diff_len = left_len + right_len;
let total_len = both_len + left_len + right_len;
(diff_len as f32) / (total_len as f32)
})
})
.reduce(f32::max)
.unwrap_or(0.0)
}
// Total occupancy of changes. Large diffs don't always look complex.
fn total_change_ratio(diff_lines: &[DiffLine]) -> f32 {
let (diff_len, total_len) = diff_lines
.iter()
.flat_map(|line| &line.hunks)
.fold((0, 0), |(diff_len, total_len), (side, data)| {
let l = data.len();
match side {
DiffLineHunkSide::Both => (diff_len, total_len + l),
DiffLineHunkSide::Left => (diff_len + l, total_len + l),
DiffLineHunkSide::Right => (diff_len + l, total_len + l),
}
});
(diff_len as f32) / (total_len as f32)
}
```
* We started with a tristate flag where:
- Auto - Maintain current behaviour. This edits if
the wc parent is not a head commit. Else, it will
create a new commit on the parent of the wc in
the direction of movement.
- Always - Always edit
- Never - Never edit, prefer the new+squash workflow.
However, consensus the review thread is that `auto` mode where we try to infer when to
switch to `edit mode`, should be removed. So `ui.movement.edit` is a boolean flag now.
- true: edit mode
- false: new+squash mode
* Also add a `--no-edit` flag as the explicit inverse of `--edit` and
ensure both flags take precedence over the config.
* Update tests that assumed edit mode inference, to specify `--edit` explicitly.
NOTE: #4302 was squashed into this commit, so see that closed PR for review history.
Part of #3947
We all noticed that x86 macOS binaries are no longer being provided on release,
due to `macos-11` runners going the way of the Dodo a while back. Nobody
alterted us to this, funny enough.
After some quick discussion, we concluded some things:
- x86 macOS runners are likely oversubscribed, and hurt CI latency badly
- `macos-12` is also deprecated; `macos-13` is the best x86 runner available
- GitHub probably isn't going to expand macOS runner capacity; `macos-13` will
one day go away
- Some people are still using `jj` on Intel Macs. We didn't get alerted because
they do their own builds for now, but may not always do that.
- We can just try to build on `macos-13` and make it optional for merges.
So that's what this does. It might be mergeable outright, but we can also use it
to measure build latency impacts.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>