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.
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.
This commit replaces the functions `UserSettings::user_name_placeholder()`` and
`UserSettings::user_email_placeholder()` with `const` `&str`s to emphasize that
the placeholder strings must not be changed to support commits without
names or email addresses made before this change.
I plan to add `revsets.short-prefixes` and `revsets.immutable` soon,
and I think `[revsets]` seems like reasonable place to put them. It
seems consistent with our `[templates]` section. However, it also
suffers from the same problem as that section, which is that the
difference between `[templates]` and `[template-aliases]` is not
clear. We can decide about about templates and revsets later.
Now we have 4 callers, I concluded this is common enough to add an
extension method. Still I think it's preferred to define config items in
src/config/*.toml if possible. It will catch typo of config keys.
The outermost "op-log" label isn't moved to the default template. I think
it belongs to the command's formatter rather than the template.
Old bikeshedding items:
- "current_head", "is_head", or "is_head_op"
=> renamed to "current_operation"
- "templates.op-log" vs "templates.op_log" (the whole template is labeled
as "op-log")
=> renamed to "op_log"
- "template-aliases.'format_operation_duration(time_range)'"
=> renamed to 'format_time_range(time_range)'
Supported values are,
- `none` for no author information,
- `full` for both the name and email,
- `name` for just the name,
- `username` for username part of the email,
- (default) `email` (or any other gibberish for that matter) for the full email.
Add a new git.auto-local-branch config option. When set to false, a
remote-tracking branch imported from Git will not automatically create a
local branch target. This is implemented by a new GitSettings struct
that passes Git-related settings from UserSettings.
This behavior is particularly useful in a co-located jj and Git repo,
because a Git remote might have branches that are not of everyday
interest to the user, so it does not make sense to export them as local
branches in Git. E.g. https://github.com/gitster/git, the maintainer's
fork of Git, has 379 branches, most of which are topic branches kept
around for historical reasons, and Git developers wouldn't be expected
to have local branches for each remote-tracking branch.
I think of it more as style than a format, so using `style` in the
config key makes sense to me.
I didn't bother making upgrades easy by supporting the old name since
this was just released and only a few developers probably have it set.
Since per-repo config may contain CLI settings, it must be visible to CLI.
Therefore, UserSettings::with_repo() -> RepoSettings isn't used, and its
implementation is nullified by this commit.
#616
It's unclear whether parse_args() or its caller should update LayeredConfigs.
--config-toml is processed by callee to apply --color early. -R/--repository
will be processed by caller since it will instantiate WorkspaceLoader.
Maybe --config-toml can be removed from EarlyArgs, and handle_early_args()
just updates ui state based on --color argument?
This will be needed to test functionality for showing shortest
unique prefix for commit and change ids. As a bonus, this also
allows us to test log output with change ids.
As another bonus, this will prevent occasional CI failures like
https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/actions/runs/3817554687/jobs/6493881468.
When we fail to read the user's config, it seems obviously better to
use the default config than to not use it. It doesn't matter yet, but
it will matter when I've moved color configs out of `formatter.rs` and
into a `.toml` file. Without this change, we'd lose the default
coloring of the error message for config errors.
Let's acknowledge everyone's contributions by replacing "Google LLC"
in the copyright header by "The Jujutsu Authors". If I understand
correctly, it won't have any legal effect, but maybe it still helps
reduce concerns from contributors (though I haven't heard any
concerns).
Google employees can read about Google's policy at
go/releasing/contributions#copyright.
It would be nice to be able to use snapshot testing and not have to
parse the output of `jj op log`. This patch lets us do that by
providing a new environment variable and config for overriding the
timestamps. Unlike `operation.hostname` and `operation.username`,
these are only meant for tests.
We currently get the hostname and username from the `whoami` crate. We
do that in lib crate, without giving the caller a way to override
them. That seems wrong since it might be used in a server and
performing operations on behalf of some other user. This commit makes
the hostname and username configurable, so the calling crate can pass
them in. If they have not been passed in, we still default to the
values from the `whoami` crate.
Unfortunately, TOML requires quotes around the argument. So, the
usage is `jj --config-toml ui.color=\"always\"` in bash. The plan is
to eventually have a `--config` option with simpler syntax for
simple cases.
As discussed in https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/discussions/688.
Sometimes a tagged commit is not in any branch on the remote, but we
should still consider them upstream and not include them in the
default log template.
This was reported by @colemickens but now that I think about it, I
remember seeing such commits in the Git core repo (v1.4.4.5 and a few
commits before it were never merged into main).
We don't have a good way of testing this because we don't have a
command for creating tags.
Closes#681