| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The previous method only grabbed first line of a comment. The new
approach replaces the messy Comment->string->parse->html with
Comment->html.
Also replaced all open()s with codecs.open to allow for non-ASCII
output. Alphabetized the non libbe imports while I was adding codecs.
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- some changes to the css and to the html layout
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Implemented the creation of the index for active and inactive bugs, with detail for earch of them
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Creation of the index file
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Following Ben's Wed, 01 Jul 2009 11:31:51 +1000 suggestion.
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On the advice of
Martin F Krafft <madduck@debian.org>
as posted in
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=477125
on
Fri, 12 Jun 2009 17:03:02 +0200
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Previously it choked when options.content_type == None.
I'm not sure how that made it past test_usage.sh...
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I don't know much darcs, so I make no claims about the beauty of my
implementation. It seems to get the job done though, until a darcs
guru comes along.
I also tweaked the libbe.git.Git._rcs_get_user_id to handle the case
where user.name or user.email are not set.
I also added the option to pass a stdin string into the
libbe.rcs.RCS._u_invoke* functions.
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The main problem was the encoding/decoding that was happening to _all_
input/output. Now many I/O activities have a `binary' option to
disable any encoding/decoding. The `binary' flag is set whenever the
comment content-type is not a text/* type.
In order to print valid XML (and make life easy on xml/be-xml-to-mbox),
non text/* types are printed out as base64-encoded MIME messages, so
be list --xml | be-xml-to-mbox | catmutt
works as you'd expect.
With the standard (non-XML) output from `be show', we just print a
message telling the user that we can't reasonably display the MIME
type and that they should use the XML output if they want to see it.
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This makes all the failed tests understandable, since they all crash
with strings like:
AssertionError: Arch RCS not found
Which makes more sense than spitting out the raw CommandError.
It also means that installed_rcs() actually works now ;).
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This closes bug 7ec2c071-9630-42b0-b08a-9854616f9144. BE is now bug
free ;). At least until the next commit :p.
Writing depend.py turned up a few style points in tag.py which I also
fixed.
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Loading all the bugs for the list search had the side effect of
updating all the bug values files to the new YAML format.
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Now you can limit your list to bugs matching certain extra strings,
e.g. "TAG:working".
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Just return an empty dict instead.
Steps to reproduce:
$ mkdir /tmp/BE-test
$ cd /tmp/BE-test
$ be set-root
$ be new 'having too much fun'
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extra_strings returns to a defaulting property from a cached/generator
property, with the help of the new, mutable defaults. Lots of
deepcopies avoid mutable default uncertainty too ;). And
copy.deepcopy([]) should be pretty cheap.
tag --remove had previously left settings["extra_strings"] as [],
which polluted the bug's values file. Now the improved
defaulting_property notices a return to the default [], and sets the
internally stored value to EMPTY.
I struggled with creating a more intuitive way to notice changes to
extra_strings than the
tmp = bug.extra_strings
<work on tmp>
bug.extra_strings = tmp
but didn't have any luck. The problem seems to be that if you only
hand out copies of your default, you don't have any pointers to what
you handed out to check for changes. On the other hand, if you hand
out your original default, any external changes will _change_ your
original default. I suppose you could only hand out copies, but keep
a list of all copies handed out, but that sounds like a disaster.
Reassigning is easy enough.
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This avoids the problems associated with mutable defaults.
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