pick: remove transaction on the whole command (issue6037)
At its core, pick is a pretty straightforward and well-behaving command, it
uses functions already in core hg, it checks that wdir is clean and that
changeset to pick is not public, it checks if there happen to be merge
conflicts and can be --continue'd later, etc.
It is very similar to graft in core (it also uses mergemod.graft function), but
it obsoletes the original changeset. However, graft does not experience this
incorrect behavior from issue 6037.
What happens in the test case for this issue when we pick a revision that
touches both "a" and "b": mergemod.graft() takes the original changeset and
tries to apply it to the wdir, which results in "b" being marked as newly added
and ready to be committed, "a" updated with the new content and being marked as
modified, but "a" also has conflicts. Pick correctly notices this and saves its
state before asking for user intervention. So far so good. However, when the
command raises InterventionRequired to print a user-facing message and exit
while being wrapped in repo.transaction() context manager, the latter partially
undoes what mergemod.graft() did: it unmarks "b" as added. And when user
continues pick, "b" is therefore not tracked and is not included in the
resulting commit.
The transaction is not useful here, because it doesn't touch wdir (it's still
dirty), it doesn't remove pickstate (and other commands will refuse to work
until pick --abort or --continue), it just makes "b" untracked.
The solution is to use repo.transaction() only to wrap code that writes data to
hg store in the final stages of the command after all checks have passed and is
not expected to fail on trivial cases like merge conflicts. For example,
committing the picked changeset. But since pick uses repo.commit() for that,
and because that function already uses a transaction, wrapping it in another
transaction doesn't make sense.
====================================
Testing head checking code: Case A-8
====================================
Mercurial checks for the introduction of new heads on push. Evolution comes
into play to detect if existing branches on the server are being replaced by
some of the new one we push.
This case is part of a series of tests checking this behavior.
Category A: simple case involving a branch being superceeded by another.
TestCase 8: single-changeset branch indirect rewrite
.. old-state:
..
.. * 1-changeset branch
..
.. new-state:
..
.. * 1-changeset branch succeeding to A, through another unpushed changesets
..
.. expected-result:
..
.. * push allowed
..
.. graph-summary:
..
.. A'
.. A ø⇠ø⇠◔ A''
.. |/ /
.. | /
.. |/
.. ●
$ . $TESTDIR/testlib/push-checkheads-util.sh
Test setup
----------
$ mkdir A8
$ cd A8
$ setuprepos
creating basic server and client repo
updating to branch default
2 files updated, 0 files merged, 0 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ cd client
$ hg up 0
0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ mkcommit A1
created new head
$ hg up 0
0 files updated, 0 files merged, 1 files removed, 0 files unresolved
$ mkcommit A2
created new head
$ hg debugobsolete `getid "desc(A0)" ` `getid "desc(A1)"`
obsoleted 1 changesets
$ hg debugobsolete `getid "desc(A1)" ` `getid "desc(A2)"`
obsoleted 1 changesets
$ hg log -G --hidden
@ c1f8d089020f (draft): A2
|
| x f6082bc4ffef (draft): A1
|/
| x 8aaa48160adc (draft): A0
|/
o 1e4be0697311 (public): root
Actual testing
--------------
$ hg push
pushing to $TESTTMP/A8/server (glob)
searching for changes
adding changesets
adding manifests
adding file changes
added 1 changesets with 1 changes to 1 files (+1 heads)
2 new obsolescence markers
obsoleted 1 changesets
$ cd ../..