The idea is to (ab)use pest::error::Error type to pretty-print error
message with code span. pest::error::Error will be constructed upfront
to erase lifetime from Span<'i>/Position<'i>.
Baby step towards embedding matcher in RevsetExpression. If we had a fileset
language or regex pattern, we would probably want to parse it at this stage
so the syntax error can be reported without evaluation.
Since 'merges()' just filters the candidates set per item, it doesn't need
a candidates argument. Perhaps, 'merges(x)' could be a predicate to select
merge commits within a subgraph 'x', but I don't know if that would be
useful.
Since 'filter(expr)' is identical to 'expr & filter()', it can be rewritten
in order to minimize the candidates set to be scanned.
The implementation is somewhat similar to revsetlang.optimize() of Mercurial,
but I've split the tree rewriting logic to several steps. I think that's good
for maintainability and should help us conclude that a recursion will
eventually terminate.
This helps to match '(filter, _) | (_, filter)' to rewrite the expression
tree. Only one predicate is allowed for now, but I think it can be extended
to internalize 'f(c) & g(c)' as '(g*f)(c)' to eliminate redundant lookup
of commit object.
More workspace-derived parameters will be added, and I don't think wrapping
with Option for each makes sense because all parameters should be available
if workspace exists.
Previously an expression 'foo-bar-' failed to parse because
1. try first rule: 'foo-bar-' matches (identifier_part+ ~ '-')+, but the
trailing '' doesn't match identifier_part+
2. fall back to second rule: 'foo' matches identifier_part+
=> (identifier 'foo')
Instead, we need to consume as much (identifier_part ~ '-' ~ ...) as possible
before falling back to the identifier_part rule.
I think the trailing + of identifier_part+ is redundant, so removed it as
well.
`wc_commit` seems clearer than `checkout` and not too much longer. I
considered `working_copy` but it was less clear (could be the path to
the working copy, or an instance of `WorkingCopy`). I also considered
`working_copy_commit`, but that seems a bit too long.
This will be a basic building block of 'jj log PATH'. The implementation
is naive, but works fine for small repos like jj. For mid-size repos,
there would be various areas which need to be optimized.
This adds a `--reversed` flag to `jj log` to show commits with later
commits further down. It works both with and without the graph.
Since the graph-drawing code is already independent of the
relationship between commits, it doesn't need any updating.
This introduces a `connected(x)` function, which is simply the same as
`x:x`. It's occasionally useful if `x` is a long expression. It's also
useful as a building block for `root(x)` (coming soon).
Because we record each workspace's checkout in the repo view, we can
-- unlike other VCSs -- let the user refer to any workspace's checkout
in revsets. This patch adds syntax for that, so you can show the
contents of the checkout in workspace "foo" with `jj show foo@`. That
won't automatically commit that workspace's working copy, however.
It makes sense to omit either of the arguments of the `..` operator,
even though `..x` is equivalent to `:x`. `x..`, with a implied right
argument of `heads()` is more useful.
The recent e5dd93cbf712, whose description says "cleanup: make Vec
inside CommitId etc. non-public", made all ID types in the `backend`
module *except* for `CommitId` non-public :P This patch makes
With this change, you can do e.g. `heads(remote_branches())`. That
should currently be the same as `public_heads()`, except that we don't
yet remove public heads when remote branches have been updated. Having
this support should be generally useful, but I may use it in the short
term specifically for depending less on the public heads, until I get
around to keeping them up to date.
The removal of hidden heads was just there to help with the transition
away from evolution (#32). Now that we no longer depend on evolution
for removing old heads, we can remove the hack.
This rewrites the code for resolving a change id to simply walk the
entire index. That's obviously not optimal, but it's not worse than
what we did in the evolution-based resolution. This is yet another
step towards removing support for evolution (#32).
Now that we no longer have to be careful whether we mean "all heads"
or "non-obsolete heads", there's no need to pass them as
arguments. It's still possible to get a DAG range to a hidden commit
by using `RevsetExpression::dag_range_to()`, as long as the hidden
commit is indexed.
Now that we remove hidden heads whenever a transaction commits,
`non_obsolete_heads()` should always be the same as `all_heads()`,
except during a transaction. I don't think we depend on the difference
even during a transaction. Let's simplify a bit by removing the revset
function `all_heads()` and renaming `non_obsolete_heads()` to
`heads()`. This is part of issue #32.