Clap bails parsing when an "error" is encountered, e.g. a subcommand is missing,
"--help" is passed, or the "help" subcommand is invoked. This means that the
current approach of parsing args does not handle flags like `--no-pager` or
`--color` when an error is encountered.
Fix this by separating early args into their own struct and preprocessing them
using `ignore_errors` (per https://github.com/clap-rs/clap/issues/1880).
The early args are in a new `EarlyArgs` struct because of a known bug where
`ignore_errors` causes default values not to be respected
(https://github.com/clap-rs/clap/issues/4391 specifically calls out bool, but
strings may also be ignored), so when `ignore_errors` is given, the default
values will be missing and parsing will fail unless the right arg types are used
(e.g`. Option`). By parsing only early args (using the new struct) we only need
to adjust `no_pager`, instead of adjusting all args with a default value.
While working on ancestor generation, I noticed Mercurial has this
substitution rule. Since it's easier to deal with Ancestors() than Range {},
'roots..heads' is first decomposed to ':heads & ~:roots'.
I failed to solve type puzzle for to_predicate_fn<'a>(&'a self) where
'repo: 'a, so struct RevWalkRevset<'repo, T> is bounded by T to consume
the lifetime parameter.
Most people seem to have forgotten to add themselves despite the
reminder in the PR tempalte. I (or whoever does the release) will fill
it out just before each release instead, like I did for 0.6.0. I
didn't remove the people already on the list for this release, but
I'll regenerate it for next release anyway.
When importing `conflicts.md` into the Google repo, our internal tools
complained that it contained conflict markers. Similarly, if you ever
get an actual merge conflict in the file, the working-copy
snapshotting would parse our sample conflict markers here, forcing you
to work around it. Let's avoid that by indenting the conflict
markers. Hopefully readers will understand that the leading space is
not part of the markers.
This will be a building block of 'parents(base)' revset. 'base---' will
be .filter_by_generation(3..4) for example. I think 'ancestors(base)' can
also have an optional generation parameter, but I haven't considered any
particular syntax yet.
Even though I couldn't determine if RevWalkGenerationRange has a measurable
cost compared to RevWalk, I'm not comfortable with enabling generation
tracking by default. So this patch adds a separate struct. I duplicated
Iterator::next() method as it seemed rather complicated to extract a common
iterator wrapper.
Actual filtering function and tests will be added by the next commit.
The number of lines in the diff output is unchanged.
This makes diffs a little more readable when the "..." would otherwise hide a
single line of code that helps in understanding the surrounding context lines.
This change mostly rearranges the loop that consumes the diff lines, so it can
buffer up to num_context_lines*2+1 lines instead of just num_context_lines.
There's a bit of extra code to handle times when a "..." replaces the last line
of a diff.
Note that `jj diff --git` is unchanged, and will still output `@@` lines that
replace a single line of context.
This fixes the bug described in the previous commit.
Because we now print the message about failed exports also while
snapshotting, we may end up reporting it twice on one command. I'm not
sure it's worth worrying about that. We can deal with that later if it
turns out to be a common complaint.
If a branch points to the working-copy commit, it will automatically
get updated when the working copy is snapshotted. However, it turns
out that we don't automatically export the change to Git when running
in a colocated working copy (nor in a non-colocated working copy, but
that shouldn't be surprising). The change will not get exported until
a non-snapshot operation runs. We noticed this bug in @hooper's repo
today.
Google's security team asked us to remove this use of a PAT. It's
apparently supposed to work without it, it's just that it won't be
able to check that we have bronch protection set up.
We're more likely to filter out empty commits, so this should be slightly
faster in practice.
The extra Option<> isn't needed, but it should clarify that "prefix([])"
is not "everything".
Unfortunately, config::Value is lax and '[7]' could be parsed as '["7"]'.
I don't like it, but I think that's actually better for consistency as we
use config.get_string() in various places.