Before this patch, when updating to a commit that has a file that's
currently an ignored file on disk, jj would crash. After this patch,
we instead leave the conflicting files or directories on disk. We
print a helpful message about how to inspect the differences between
the intended working copy and the actual working copy, and how to
discard the unintended changes.
Closes#976.
It's about time we make the working copy a pluggable backend like we
have for the other storage. We will use it at Google for at least two
reasons:
* To support our virtual file system. That will be a completely
separate working copy backend, which will interact with the virtual
file system to update and snapshot the working copy.
* On local disk, we need to tell our build system where to find the
paths that are not in the sparse patterns. We plan to do that by
wrapping the standard local working copy backend (the one moved in
this commit), writing a symlink that points to the mainline commit
where the "background" files can be read from.
Let's start by renaming the exising implementation to
`local_working_copy`.
Apparently, it gets too verbose if the remote history is actively rewritten.
Let's summarize the output for now. The plan is to show the list of moved refs
instead of the full list of abandoned commits.
This will probably help to understand why you've got conflicts after fetching.
Maybe we can also report changed local refs.
I think the stats should be redirected to stderr, but we have many other similar
messages printed to stdout. I'll probably fix them all at once later.
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.
`jj split` with no arguments operates interactively, but I am nonetheless constantly running `jj split -i` because I expect an `--interactive` flag to exist for consistency.
However, `jj split <paths>` before this commit always operates non-interactively, so this commit has the nice practical effect that you can restrict your interactive splitting to a certain set of paths.
I'm going to make this function check against a configurable revset
indicating immutable commits. It's more efficient to do that by
evaluating the revset only once.
We may want to have a version of the function where we pass in an
unevaluated revset expression. That would allow us to error out if the
user accidentally tries to rebase a large set of commits, without
having to evaluate the whole set first.
Once we add support for immutable commits, `jj duplicate` should be
allowed to create duplicate of them. The reason it can't duplicate the
root commit is that it would mean there would be multiple root
commits, which would break the invariant that the single root commit
is the only root commit (and the backends refuse to write a commit
without parents). So let's have `jj duplicate` check specifically that
the user doesn't try to duplicate the root commit instead.
For `jj split --interactive`, the user will want to select changes from a subset of files. This means that we need to pass the `Matcher` object when materializing the list of changed files. I also updated the parameter lists so that the matcher always immediately follows the tree objects.
As we discussed in #1928, it seems better to print information about
abandoned commits in the context of the pre-abandon state. For
example, that means that we'll include any branches that pointed to
the now-abandoned commits.
This is a naive implementation, which cannot deal with multiple children
or parents stemming from merges.
Note: I gave each command separate a separate argument struct
for extensibility.
Fixes#878
In `LockedWorkingCopy::drop()`, we panic if the caller had not called
`finish()`. IIRC, the idea was both to find bugs where we forgot to
call `finish()` and to prevent continuing with a modified
`WorkingCopy` instance. I don't think the former has been a problem in
practice. It has been a problem in practice to call `discard()` to
avoid the panic, though. To address that, we can make the `Drop`
implementation discard the changes (forcing a reload of the state if
the working copy is accessed again).
I made it simply fail on explicit fetch/import, and ignored on implicit import.
Since the error mode is predictable and less likely to occur. I don't think it
makes sense to implement warning propagation just for this.
Closes#1690.
This switches the whole `diff_util` module to working with
`MergedTree`, `Merge<Option<TreeValue>>` etc., so it can support
tree-level conflicts.
Since we want to avoid using `ConflictId`s, I switched the hash we use
for conflicts in `--git` style diffs to use an all-'0' id instead of
using the conflict id.
An alternative name for it would be `arity()`, but `num_sides()`
probably more clearly says that it's not about the number of removes
or the total number of terms.
To support tree-level conflicts, we're going to need to update the
working copy from one `MergedTree` to another. We're going need to
store multiple tree ids in the `tree_state` file. This patch gets us
closer to that by getting the diff from `MergedTree`s`, even though we
assume that they are legacy trees for now, so we can write to the
single-tree `tree_state` file.
Many of the `TreeBuilder` users have an `Option<TreeValue>` and call
either `set()` or `remove()` or the builder depending on whether the
value is present. Let's centralize this logic in a new
`TreeBuilder::set_or_remove()`.
`revset::parse()` already has a `RevsetWorkspaceContext` argument, so
I think it makes sense to put that and the other context arguments
into a larger `RevsetParseContext` object.
We resolve file paths into repo-relative paths while parsing the
revset expression, so I think it's consistent to also resolve which
workspace "@" refers to while parsing it. That means we won't need the
workspace context both while parsing and while resolving symbols.
In order to break things like `author("martinvonz@")` (thanks to @yuja
for catching this), I also changed the parsing of working-copy
expressions so they are not allowed to be
quoted. `author(martinvonz@)` will therefore be an error now. That
seems like a small improvement anyway, since we have recently talked
about making `root` and `[workspace]@` not parsed as other symbols.
One use case for `jj split` is when creating a new commit from some of
the changes in the working copy. If there's no description on the
working-copy commit in that case, it seems better to not ask the user
to provide one when they're splitting the commit either.