The translation from method error to keyword error can go wrong if the context
object had n-ary methods (n > 0), which isn't the case as of now. For
simplicity, arguments error is mapped to "self.<name>(..)" suggestion.
Local variables and "self" could be merged without using extra method, but
we'll need extend_*_candidates() to merge in symbol/function aliases anyway.
This seems more useful if aliases are nested. The innermost error usually
contains the problem, and the outer errors are contexts where aliases are
expanded.
Except for the generic list and template methods. We'll need a bit more
refactoring to migrate List<T> method builders to be compatible with
non-capturing fn() type.
This allows us to define documentation comments for types implemented using the
id_type! macro. Comments defined above the type inside the macro will be
captured and visible in generated docs.
Example:
```
id_type!(
/// Stable identifier for a [`Commit`]. Unlike the `CommitId`, the `ChangeId`
/// follows the commit and is not updated when the commit is rewritten.
pub ChangeId
);
```
This commit also adds documentation for the `CommitId` and `ChangeId` types
defined using the `id_type!` macro.
The recovery commit we create when we run into a stale working copy
with a missing operation currently has an empty tree. Our commit
backend at Google creates an index of which files changed in each
commit. That gets really expensive when a commit deletes all files in
the repo, as these recovery commits do. So for our backend, it is much
better to make the recovery commit empty instead. That's what this
patch does.
It almost doesn't matter functionally what tree we use for it since we
don't care much about the current tree when snapshotting the working
copy. It does matter in a few cases, however. One case is for
conflicts. In that case, it's likely better to use the recovery
commit's parent as base tree (as we do by making the recovery commit
empty) than to use an empty tree, as that would guarantee that all
conflicts would be considered resolved. (Side note: perhaps we should
start looking at the current commit's parent instead of looking at the
current commit when snapshotting, but that's a topic for another day.)
Follows up 7552f939c6 "tests: disable most gpg integration tests on Windows."
I couldn't find this test failing in a few samples before, but it does now.
When we abandon a working-copy commit, we create a new working-copy
commit on top. This behave is very useful, but it's not obvious. Let's
document it.
Thankfully, 2bbefcc338 (rewrite: default to not simplifying ancestor
merges) means that there are much fewer commands where we need to
document this behavior.
There are two major goals:
* provide typo hints in a similar way to revset
* make methods extensible
The created method table is bound to the 'repo lifetime because of the problem
described in the inline comment. It would be nice if we can build cachable
core method table for<'repo> CommitTemplateLanguage<'repo, '_>, but I couldn't
figure out how.
Add an option to list tracked branches only
This option keeps most of the current `--all` printing logic, but:
- Omits local Git-tracking branches by default (can be extended to
support filtering by remote).
- Skip over the branch altogether if it doesn't contain tracked remotes
- Don't print the untracked_remote_refs at the end
Usage:
`jj branch list -t`
`jj branch list --tracked`
`jj branch list --tracked <branch name>`
This removes the special handling of the working-copy commit. By
recording when an empty/emptied commit was abanoned, we rebase
descendants correctly and create a new empty working-copy commit on
top.
I think the user usually wants to abandon only newly empty commits. I
think they should use `jj abandon` if they want to get rid of already
empty commits. By keeping already empty commits, we don't need to
special-case the working copy and merge commits.
Show our positive reviews to the world. It's also not completly serious, in a similar fashion to
Phabricator.
Co-Authored-By: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
This allows us to call alias function with the top-level object.
For convenience, all self.<method>()s are available as keywords. I don't think
we'll want to deprecate them. It would be tedious if we had to specify
-T'self.commit_id()' instead of -Tcommit_id.
If I remember correctly, wrap_fn() was added to help type inference. It no
longer makes sense because the type is coerced by TemplateFunction::new()
and language.wrap_*().
When running the `nix build`, the `buildRustPackage` function -- which builds
the `jj` crates -- calls `cargo build --release` with flags like `HOST_CXX`
set. This is called the `buildPhase`. Then, it runs the `checkPhase`, which
calls `cargo nextest`, in our case. However, it does not set `HOST_CXX`, for
some reason.
The intent of `buildRustPackage` is that the `buildPhase` and `checkPhase`
have their compilation options fully aligned so that they reuse the local cargo
`target/` cache directory, avoiding a full recompilation. However, the lack
of `HOST_CXX` above among others causes a cache miss, and a bunch of cascading
recompilations. The net impact is that we compile all of the codebase once in
`buildPhase`, then again in `checkPhase`, making the Nix CI build 2x slower on
average than the other Linux runners; 2-3 minutes versus 7 minutes, on average.
Instead, re-introduce a 'check' into the Flake directly, which overrides the
`jujustsu` package, but stubs out the `buildPhase`. This means it will only run
`checkPhase`, which is what we want. Then, modify the CI to run `nix flake check`
again, like it used to in the past.
Unfortunately, this doesn't fix the cache miss when running `nix build`
yourself, it recompiles from scratch in both phases still. That needs to be
fixed in the future, but it's tolerable for now.
This reverts most of 71a3045032.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
This partially reverts changes in a9f489ccdf "Switch to ignore crate for
gitignore handling." Since child ignore object no longer needs to access the
root to resolve the prefix path, it's simpler to store a matcher per node.
With the current implementation, the file3 pattern is set to the prefix
"foo/foo/bar". I don't know if (unrooted) "baz" prefixed with "foo/foo/bar"
should match "foo/bar/baz", but apparently it is. Anyway, that wouldn't be
the case in practice because adjacent .gitignore files shouldn't be loaded.
This should nerf some of the impact of the flaky Windows GPG tests right now,
which are currently non-deterministically running into hangs, causing a lot of
PRs to stall out. 15 minutes was chosen as a good trade-off between "pretty far
from our current build times" while also catching obvious bugs and flakes.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
The description of `jj diff` was lost in commit b5e4e670. We later got
a short description for it in b5e4e670. This patch restores the
original description.
This eliminates the separate keywords table. All keywords are resolved through
the pseudo "self" property. Maybe we'll add "self" keyword/variable later.
This is copied from the commit templater. I'm going to extract the "self"
property handling to the core template builder, and build_keyword() methods
will be replaced with that.
We do clone Operation object in several places, and I'm going to add one more
.clone() in the templater. Since the underlying metadata has many fields, I
think it's better to wrap it with Arc just like a Commit object.
The default immutable_heads() includes tags(), which makes sense, but computing
heads(tags()) can be expensive because the tags() set is usually sparse. For
example, "jj bench revset 'heads(tags())'" took 157ms in my linux stable
mirror. We can of course optimize the heads evaluation by using bit set or
segmented index, but the query includes many historical heads if the repository
has per-release branches, which are uninteresting anyway. So, this patch
replaces heads(immutable_heads()) with trunk().
The reason we include heads(immutable_heads()) is to mitigate the following
problem. Suppose trunk() is the branch to be based off, I think using trunk()
here is pretty good.
```
A B
*---*----* trunk() ⊆ immutable_heads()
\
* C
```
https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/pull/2247#discussion_r1335078879
In my linux stable mirror, this makes the default log revset evaluation super
fast. immutable_heads(), if configured properly, includes many historical
branch heads which are also the visible heads.
revsets/immutable_heads()..
---------------------------
0 12.27 117.1±0.77m
3 1.00 9.5±0.08m
I'm going to add pre-filtering to the 'roots..heads' evaluation path, and
difference_by() will be used there to calculate 'heads ~ roots'.
Union and intersection iterators are slightly changed so that all iterators
prioritize iter1's item.