Now as default and elided node symbols come from the config, the next logical
step is to use them directly bypassing GraphLog. Note that commands like `jj op
log` and `jj obslog` do not use the elided node symbol at all.
This was proposed by @Brixy in
https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/discussions/2882 a while ago. There
seems to be pretty strong consensus that it's a good idea.
I've copied the added test cases from `test_move_command.rs`, just
replacing `move` by `squash`, `--to` by `--into`, and deleting the
test of a no-arg invocation (`jj move` fails, `jj squash` does not -
it defaults to squashing into the parent).
Just a minor code cleanup. We still need Index for &CompositeIndex because the
type is unsized, and unsized type cannot be converted to another dyn reference.
This helps to eliminate higher-ranked trait bounds from RevWalkRevset and
RevWalk combinators to be added. Since &CompositeIndex is now a real reference,
it can be passed to functions as index: &T.
This helps to migrate CompositeIndex<'_> wrapper to &CompositeIndex. If
the wrapped reference had a lifetimed field, it couldn't be represented as
a trivial reference type.
This patch makes `jj squash` us the helper I just extracted from `jj
move`. I had a to add a few small features to it for that.
The `test_squash_command.rs` test changed in a few cases where we do a
partial squash. After this patch, we include the rebased child in the
count of rebased descendants. That seems reasonable and consistent
with partial squash/move further than 1 generation.
This is just a little step towards reusing the helper I just extracted
from `jj move`. I had to update `test_immutable_commits.rs` because it
would otherwise fail because of the merge rather than failing because
of the immutable commit.
I'm soon going to make `jj squash` accept either `-r` or
`--from/--to`, which means `-r` will then be optional. This patch
prepares for that already, since it also simplifies the code a little
(and improves it so we warn if the user does `jj squash -r @
nonexistent`).
This matches what we do for `jj squash`, whether it's a
full or partial move.
I didn't add a test since we're planning to deprecate `jj move`, and
this will soon be tested via the `jj squash` tests.
The `destination` variable we use when creating the operation log may
have been replaced earlier in the code. I think this was a regression
when I moved the setting of the description from `start_transaction()`
to `finish_transaction()` a while ago.
We haven't used custom Git commit headers for two main reasons:
1. I don't want commits created by jj to be different from any other
commits. I don't want Git projects to get annoyed by such commit
and reject them.
2. I've been concerned that tools don't know how to handle such
headers, perhaps even resulting in crashes.
The first argument doesn't apply to commits with conflicts because
such commits would never be accepted by a project whether or not they
use custom commit headers. The second argument is less relevant for
conflicted commits because most tools will be confused by such commits
anyway.
Storing conflict information in commit headers means that we can
transfer them via the regular Git wire protocol. We already include
the tree objects nested inside the root-level tree, so they will also
be transferred.
So, let's start by writing the information redundantly to the commit
header and to the existing storage. That way we can roll it back if we
realize there's a problem with using commit headers.
Initially we were thinking to have `Revset` return something like
`CachedRevset`:
```
pub trait CachedRevset {
fn iter(&self) -> Box<dyn Iterator<Item = Commit>>;
fn contains(&self, &CommitId) -> bool;
}
```
But we weren't sure what use case for `iter` would be, so we dropped the `iter`
method. `CachedRevset` with single `contains` method needed a better name. We
weren't able to come up with one, so we decided instead to have a method on
`Revset` that returns a closure to check if a commit is in a revset.
"for<'index> RevWalk<CompositeIndex<'index>, .." works as of now, but it won't
be composed well. So I'll turn CompositeIndex<'_> into &CompositeIndex in the
next batch, and remove "for<'index>".
This eliminates lifetimed fields from RevWalk objects, and the RevWalk object
will be embedded directly in RevWalkRevset.
This patch adds two separate iterator adapters. They are identical at this
point, but I'm going to add detach/reattach methods only to the borrowed
version. I'm also planning to change CompositeIndex<'_> to &CompositeIndex
to get around higher-ranked trait bound restrictions.
This simplifies the RevWalkIndex API. It would probably add fractional msecs of
overhead per next() call, but I don't see significant difference in revset
benches.
The `amend/unamend` aliases exist for smoothen onboarding for
Git/Mercurial users; I don't think we should recommend that users use
them, so I think it's fine if users override them as they
like. Therefore, I think they belong in the config.
I'm going to make CompositeIndex<'_> detachable from the RevWalk, and
"F: Fn(CompositeIndex) -> Box<dyn Iterator<..>>" of RevWalkRevset<F> will
be replaced with "W: RevWalk<CompositeIndex>". This will simplify the code
structure, but also means that we can no longer apply .take_while() here and
convert it back to RevWalk. Fortunately, ancestors_until_roots() is the only
function I need to reimplement.
It doesn't make sense to build BinaryHeap with intermediate type, and I'm
going to reimplement take_until_roots() in a way that the queue drops
uninteresting items.
The current RevWalk constructors insert intermediate items to BinaryHeap
and convert them as needed. This is redundant, and I'm going to add another
parameter that should be applied to the queue first. That's why I decided
to factor out a builder type. I considered adding a few set of factory
functions that receive all parameters, but they looked messy because most of
the parameters are of [IndexPosition] type.
This patch also adds must_use to the builder and its return types, which are
all iterator-like.
Although watchman client appears to fail at decoding non-UTF-8 path (somewhere
in serde), jj shouldn't panic if watchman could deal with that.
The outer error message "path not in the repo" would sounds odd, but I think
that's okay because 1. it's unlikely that a user input is not UTF-8, and 2.
it's technically correct that a non-UTF-8 path is not contained in the repo.
This should address both use cases:
1. If from_relative_path() is directly called, the error says ".." shouldn't
be included in the (normalized) relative path.
2. If parse_fs_path() is used, the error message contains paths relative to
cwd. #3216
Commit b4c4d911 introduced this entry in the changelog, but put it in the 0.15.0
section rather than the new unreleased section.
This was probably just because the original commit was authored before the
0.15.0 release, but merged after. Such is life.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
Some of the RevWalk methods could be generalized, but I decided to not try that
for now. I'll probably need to do more cleanup to (hopefully) remove 'index
lifetime from these types.
This release is just so we can publish the crates to crates.io. We
couldn't publish the 0.15.0 crates because `jj-lib-proc-macros` had
`publish = false`.