Apparently, it gets too verbose if the remote history is actively rewritten.
Let's summarize the output for now. The plan is to show the list of moved refs
instead of the full list of abandoned commits.
The problem is that the first non-working-copy commit moves the unborn current
branch to that commit, but jj doesn't "export" the moved branch. Therefore,
the next jj invocation notices the "external" ref change, which was actually
made by jj.
I'm not sure why we play nice by setting the "current" HEAD, but I *think* it's
okay to set the "new" HEAD and reset to the same commit to clear Git index.
This will probably help to understand why you've got conflicts after fetching.
Maybe we can also report changed local refs.
I think the stats should be redirected to stderr, but we have many other similar
messages printed to stdout. I'll probably fix them all at once later.
I think most users who change the set of immutable heads away from
`trunk() | tags()` are going to also want to change the default log
revset to include the newly mutable commit and to exclude the newly
immutable commits. So let's update the default log revset to use
`immutable_heads()` instead.
`test_templater` changed because we have overridden the set of
immutable commits there so `jj log` now includes the remote branch.
This adds a new `revset-aliases.immutable_heads()s` config for
defining the set of immutable commits. The set is defined as the
configured revset, as well as its ancestors, and the root commit
commit (even if the configured set is empty).
This patch also adds enforcement of the config where we already had
checks preventing rewrite of the root commit. The working-copy commit
is implicitly assumed to be writable in most cases. Specifically, we
won't prevent amending the working copy even if the user includes it
in the config but we do prevent `jj edit @` in that case. That seems
good enough to me. Maybe we should emit a warning when the working
copy is in the set of immutable commits.
Maybe we should add support for something more like [Mercurial's
phases](https://wiki.mercurial-scm.org/Phases), which is propagated on
push and pull. There's already some affordance for that in the view
object's `public_heads` field. However, this is simpler, especially
since we can't propagate the phase to Git remotes, and seems like a
good start. Also, it lets you say that commits authored by other users
are immutable, for example.
For now, the functionality is in the CLI library. I'm not sure if we
want to move it into the library crate. I'm leaning towards letting
library users do whatever they want without being restricted by
immutable commits. I do think we should move the functionality into a
future `ui-lib` or `ui-util` crate. That crate would have most of the
functionality in the current `cli_util` module (but in a
non-CLI-specific form).
I'm going to make this function check against a configurable revset
indicating immutable commits. It's more efficient to do that by
evaluating the revset only once.
We may want to have a version of the function where we pass in an
unevaluated revset expression. That would allow us to error out if the
user accidentally tries to rebase a large set of commits, without
having to evaluate the whole set first.
Once we add support for immutable commits, `jj duplicate` should be
allowed to create duplicate of them. The reason it can't duplicate the
root commit is that it would mean there would be multiple root
commits, which would break the invariant that the single root commit
is the only root commit (and the backends refuse to write a commit
without parents). So let's have `jj duplicate` check specifically that
the user doesn't try to duplicate the root commit instead.
Since we have overloaded operator symbols, we need to deduplicate them
upfront. Legacy and compat operators are also removed from the suggestion.
It's a bit ugly to mutate the error struct before calling Error::renamed_rule(),
but I think it's still better than reimplementing message formatting function.
As we discussed in #1928, it seems better to print information about
abandoned commits in the context of the pre-abandon state. For
example, that means that we'll include any branches that pointed to
the now-abandoned commits.
This is a naive implementation, which cannot deal with multiple children
or parents stemming from merges.
Note: I gave each command separate a separate argument struct
for extensibility.
Fixes#878
Suppose "x::y" is the operator that defaults to "root()::visible_heads()"
respectively, "::" is identical to "all()". Since we've just changed the
behavior of "..y", ".." is now "root()..visible_heads()" meaning "~root()".
In `LockedWorkingCopy::drop()`, we panic if the caller had not called
`finish()`. IIRC, the idea was both to find bugs where we forgot to
call `finish()` and to prevent continuing with a modified
`WorkingCopy` instance. I don't think the former has been a problem in
practice. It has been a problem in practice to call `discard()` to
avoid the panic, though. To address that, we can make the `Drop`
implementation discard the changes (forcing a reload of the state if
the working copy is accessed again).
I also converted the error from `InternalError` to `UserError`. So far
I've intented to use `InternalError` only to indicate bugs or corrupt
repos. I'm not sure that's a good idea, and we can revisit it later.
If the path is too long to fit on the screen, this patch makes it so
we elide the first part of it. It goes a bit further and trims it down
to ~70% of the screen, giving some room for the stat. This seems
somewhat similar to what Git does.
`insta` ignores leading indentation (as long as it's consistent within
the snapshot), but when a test case fails and you let `cargo insta`
update it, it's going to use a specific indentation. There were a few
tests that didn't match that indentation, which could lead to
surprising diffs if the tests fail at some point.
This shows that there's too much padding because we pad based on
number of bytes.
I had to reduce the path names for the file names not to get too long
for my file system.
We can still crash on terminals that are less than 4 characters wide
(maybe it doesn't matter if we do because the user can't tell the
crash report from a diffstat in such a terminal?). This patch fixes
the crash.
We would run into a panic due to "attempt to subtract with overflow"
if the path was long. This patch fixes that and adds tests showing the
current behavior when there are long paths and/or large diffs.
When we start writing tree-level conflicts in an existing repo, we
don't want commits that change the format to be non-empty if they
don't change any content. This patch updates `MergeTreeId::eq()` to
consider two resolved trees equal even if only their `MergedTreeId`
variant is different (one is path-level and one is tree-level).
I think I've gone through all places we compare tree ids and checked
that it's safe to compare them this way. One consequence is that
rebasing a commit without changing the parents (typically
auto-rebasing after `jj describe`) will not lead to the tree id
getting upgraded, due to an optimization we have for that case. I
don't think that's serious enough to handle specially; we'll have to
support the old format for existing repos for a while regardless of a
few commits not getting upgraded right away.
The number of failing tests with the config option enabled drop from
108 to 11 with this patch.
We're finally ready to start writing trees using the new format where
we represent conflicts by having multiple trees in the commit instead
of having a single tree with multiple entries at a path. This patch
adds a config option for that. It's not ready to be used yet, so I
haven't updated the release notes or other documentation.
I added only a simple CLI test for testing what happens when the
config is enabled in an existing repo. 108 tests currently fail if we
flip the default.
With the idea that less severe placeholders (like description) could
(and should) explicitly "opt out".
(Both email and name placeholders will be red with this change.)
I made it simply fail on explicit fetch/import, and ignored on implicit import.
Since the error mode is predictable and less likely to occur. I don't think it
makes sense to implement warning propagation just for this.
Closes#1690.
This switches the whole `diff_util` module to working with
`MergedTree`, `Merge<Option<TreeValue>>` etc., so it can support
tree-level conflicts.
Since we want to avoid using `ConflictId`s, I switched the hash we use
for conflicts in `--git` style diffs to use an all-'0' id instead of
using the conflict id.
This patch also extracts format_detailed_signature() function to deduplicate
the "show" template bits.
The added placeholder templates aren't labeled as "empty". If needed, I think
the whole template can be labeled as "empty" (or "empty_commit") just like
"working_copy".
Closes#2112
I think this is less surprising than falling back to the default length.
i64-to-usize conversion can also overflow on 32 bit environment, but I'm not
bothered to handle overflow scenario.