| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Now we can commit changes from the command line with a unified
interface. The interface is much less flexible than using your
particular version control system's commit command directly, so this
command is mostly intended for user-interfaces and other tools that
don't want to be bothered with the extra flexibility.
Normalized spacing in rcs.RCS.commit to produce:
summary
<BLANKLINE>
body
<TRAILING-ENDLINE>
messages regardless of the input string format.
Also fixed a "--complete" handline bug in cmdutil, and some minor
docstring typos in libbe.rcs and .editor.
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I'd forgotten to prefix the directory root, so calling
be show --only-raw-body COMMIT-ID
would fail if you weren't executing it in the repository root.
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Fixes Ben's bug 00f26f04-9202-4288-8744-b29abc2342d6.
I also tweaked update_copyright.sh to make possible future
copyright-blurb revision easier. The new algorithm is greedier,
overwriting _all_ consecutive comments after a '^# Copyright' line, so
do
# Copyright
# GPL ... GPL ... GPL
# Your comment here...
not
# Copyright
# GPL ... GPL ... GPL
#
# Your comment here...
Without the blank line, your comment would get overwritten by the next
run of update_copyright.sh.
Note that catmutt is ignored by update_copyright.sh because Moritz
Barsnick has only licensed his grepm code under the GPLv2 (not
GPLv>=2). See the initial catmutt commit for details.
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These didn't work with my update_copyright.sh.
I went with
Aaron Bentley and Panometrics, Inc.
instead of
Aaron Bentley <abentley@panoramicfeedback.com> and Panometrics, Inc.
just because of line length, but I'm open to convincing if people
prefer the latter...
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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 involved an `upgrade' of BE's bzr repo
Previous version (via `bzr info path/to/repo`): pack-0.92
Current version: rich-root-pack
The whole rich-root thing is a bzr features-vs-backwards-compatability
thing they've been wrestling with [1,2,3,4,...]. It seems that BE was
in some sort of unstable equilibrium [5], so I'll follow Ben's lead
and make the official switch. Note that you'll need to use bzr>=1.5
to make the shift [6]. For the sake of completeness, the whole
rich-root thing was introduced here [7], but I don't understand enough
of bzr to make sense of the diff. It just versions the repo's root
directory the same way it versions other directories [3]. The bzr
people seem to be planning to phase out non-rich-root formats in favor
of brisbane-core, aka 2.0beta [8], by bzr 2.0 [8], which is apparently
on the horizon [9,10,11]. What a headache.
Citations are all titles/X-List-Received-Date from
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/bazaar/
with the exception of the URL [11].
[1] [RFC] rich root pack as default in 1.8 ?
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 03:33:46 -0000
(conclusion: none)
[2] Re: 1.9rc1 countdown
Thu, 30 Oct 2008 08:44:53 -0000
(conclusion: "primary" format should be rich-root next time we make a new format)
[3] So many repo formats
Fri, 14 Nov 2008 08:41:33 -0000
Mon, 17 Nov 2008 07:37:47 -0000 (explains rich-root format)
Mon, 17 Nov 2008 22:37:39 -0000 (explains no-return policy)
Mon, 17 Nov 2008 20:57:08 -0000 (explicitly lists non-svn reasons for rich-root)
[4] Branch fails from 'pack-0.92' repo to 'rich-root-pack' repo.
Wed, 27 Aug 2008 11:31:11 -0000
(we're not sure again)
[5] Branch fails from 'pack-0.92' repo to 'rich-root-pack' repo.
Sun, 20 Apr 2008 12:58:09 -0000
[6] Branch fails from 'pack-0.92' repo to 'rich-root-pack' repo.
Fri, 29 Aug 2008 13:23:52 -0000
[7] [RFC] Knit format 2
Fri, 25 Aug 2006 22:55:36 -0000
[8] bazaar 2.0beta format for launchpad release
Fri, 29 May 2009 06:00:03 -0000
[9] Upgrading loggerhead to 1.9-rich-root
Mon, 11 May 2009 22:35:28 -0000
(mentions eventual switch to rich-root in 2.0)
[10] bzr 1.16rc1 released!
Fri, 12 Jun 2009 08:00:08 -0000
(confirms eventual switch to rich-root in 2.0)
[11] https://launchpad.net/bzr/+announcement/2733
(current outstanding releases: 1.17, 2.0)
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I borrowed most of the code for this.
get_encoding() is from Trac
http://trac.edgewall.org/browser/trunk/trac/util/datefmt.py
format_datetime()
Trac has a BSD license
http://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/TracLicense
I don't know if such a small snippet requires us to "reproduce the
above copyright" or where we need to reproduce it if it is needed.
The stdout/stdin replacement code follows
http://wiki.python.org/moin/ShellRedirectionFails
Because of the stdout replacement, the doctests executes now need an
optional 'test' argument to turn off replacement during the doctests,
otherwise doctest flips out (since it had set up stdout to catch
output, and then we clobbered it's setup).
References:
http://wiki.python.org/moin/Unicode
http://www.amk.ca/python/howto/unicode
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0100/
I also split libbe/editor.py off from libbe.utility.py and started
explaining the motivation for the BugDir init flags in it's docstring.
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Now mapfile access has fewer special cases, and there is less
redundant rcs.add/update code.
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I figured out why Arch was complaining. For non-Arch users, file
system access has been tweaked a bit see the BugDir doc string for
details. Also, you should now set BugDir.rcs instead of .rcs_name.
.rcs_name automatically tracks changes in .rcs (the reverse of the
previous situation), so read from whichever you like.
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I pushed a lot of the little helper functions into the main classes,
which makes it easier for me to keep track of what's going on. I'm
now at the point where I can run through `python test.py` with each of
the backends (by changing the search order in rcs.py
_get_matching_rcs) without any unexpected errors for each backend
(except Arch). I can also run `test_usage.sh` without non-Arch errors
either.
However, don't consider this a stable commit yet. The bzr backend is
*really*slow*, and the other's aren't blazingly fast either. I think
I'm rewriting the entire database every time I save it :p. Still, it
passes the checks. and I don't like it when zounds of changes build up.
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Lots of changes and just one commit. This started with bug
dac91856-cb6a-4f69-8c03-38ff0b29aab2, when I noticed that new bugs
were not being added appropriately with the Git backend. I'd been
working with Git trouble before with bug
0cad2ac6-76ef-4a88-abdf-b2e02de76f5c, and decided things would be
better off if I just scrapped the current RCS architecture and went to
a more object oriented setup. So I did. It's not clear how to add
support for an RCS backend:
* Create a new module that
- defines an inheritor of rsc.RCS, overriding the _rcs_*() methods
- provide a new() function for instantizating the new class
- defines an inheritor of rcs.RCStestCase, overiding the Class attribute
- defines 'suite' a unittest.TestSuite testing the module
* Add your new module to the rest in rcs._get_matching_rcs()
* Add your new module to the rest in libbe/tests.py
Although I'm not sure libbe/tests.py is still usefull.
The new framework clears out a bunch of hackery that used to be
involved with supporting becommands/diff.py. There's still room for
progress though. While implementing the new verision, I moved the
testing framework over from doctest to a doctest/unittest combination.
Longer tests that don't demonstrate a function's usage should be moved
to unittests at the end of the module, since unittest has better
support for setup/teardown, etc.
The new framework also revealed some underimplented backends, most
notably arch. These backends have now been fixed.
I also tweaked the test_usage.sh script to run through all the backends
if it is called with no arguments.
The fix for the dac bug turned out to be an unflushed file write :p.
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* catch Popen() calls to missing VCS binaries
* test.py should only test installed backends
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