Mercurial Tools

From Second Life Wiki
Revision as of 12:47, 4 April 2017 by Simon Linden (talk | contribs) (→‎For TortoiseHg Users)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The Mercurial repository

https://bitbucket.org/lindenlab/hg-tools

contains tools for working with Linden Lab repositories.

You are strongly encouraged to check out a copy of this repository and install the coding policy script there as described below, since anything you submit must pass those checks.

NOTE:

The Mercurial Initialization File referred to in the instructions below depends on your operating system. The path to it is

  • For Windows: %USERPROFILE%\Mercurial.ini
  • For Mac and Linux: $HOME/.hgrc

You should have created this file when you installed Mercurial and established your username (and, optionally, your email address). If the file does not exist, create it (see Creating a version control repository#Preparing_to_use_Mercurial).

Coding Policy

The coding_policy.py file provides both a Mercurial command extension hg policy and a hook that you should install to check all files when they are committed.

Policy Commit Hook

All changes pulled to a Linden Lab repository will have to pass the checks enforced by the command above. This is enforced when the changes are pulled by the hook provided by coding_policy.py.

To make that check automatic when you are doing local commits, add the following to your Mercurial Initialization File (changing /path/to to the location where you checked out the hg-tools repository):

[hooks]
pretxncommit.coding_policy = python:/path/to/coding_policy.py:hook

you can also check all changes you pull into your repository by adding this (also under [hooks]):

pretxnchangegroup.coding_policy = python:/path/to/coding_policy.py:hook

Anyone maintaining a shared repository is encouraged to install this so that you can prevent problems when you attempt to merge your shared repository back to viewer-development.

These hooks apply only to repositories that are related to (share a common ancestor with) specific Linden Lab repositories (see the repo_root variable assignment in the source). Operations on those repositories will print a message describing which policy is being applied, or one that indicates that the repository is not subject to Linden Lab policy checks.

You can exempt a specific repository by adding an empty hook assignment to it; this is useful for working on older repositories that don't contain all the fixes to make them pass:

[hooks]
pretxncommit.coding_policy = 
pretxnchangegroup.coding_policy =

hg policy command

To install the extension, add the following to your Mercurial Initialization File (changing /path/to to the location where you checked out the hg-tools repository):

[extensions]
policy = /path/to/coding_policy.py

To check changes against Linden Lab coding policy

 hg policy [-p {opensource|proprietary}] {[-f FILE] | [-r REV]... [-e CMD] [--remotecmd CMD] [DEST]}

With no arguments, check uncommitted changes in the working directory.

A specific file (whether or not it has been added to the repository or modified) can be checked by using the -f/--file file option.

When revisions are specified via -r/--rev, check the given committed changes in the local repository.

When given a remote repository, check changes that have been committed locally that are not present in the remote repository. To check changes that would be pushed by default, specify "default-push" as the repository name.

KBwarning.png Warning: Specifying another repository currently does not work... I am working on it, but the hook function, checking changes in your local repository prior to commit, and checking a specific file do seem to be working.

As an alternative to the above - if you need to see whether or not the changes in your repo will pass the commit hook when pulled to some other repo, preview the operation by:

  1. Install the pretxnchangegroup hook as described above
  2. Make a clone of the destination repository
  3. Change to the destination clone
  4. Pull from your working repository

The pretxnchangegroup hook will then analyze all the pulled changes.

Oz Linden 04:02, 19 August 2011 (PDT)

The checks may be against either of two policy sets: opensource or proprietary options:

-p|--policy POLICY
The set of policies to check: POLICY may be either 'opensource' or 'proprietary' (the default depends on the repository)
-r|--rev REVISION
a revision up to which you would like to check (may be specified more than once for a range)
-f|--file FILE
a file to check (whether or not it has been modified)

Confirm Push Target Hook

The confirm_target.py hook can be used to protect yourself from accidentally pushing to sensitive repositories. It will prompt you for confirmation if you attempt to push into any repository whose name ends with one of:

/lindenlab/server-trunk
/lindenlab/viewer-development
/lindenlab/viewer-pre-beta
/lindenlab/viewer-beta
/lindenlab/viewer-pre-release
/lindenlab/viewer-release

To install, add the following to your Mercurial Initialization File (changing /path/to to the location where you checked out the hg-tools repository):

[hooks]
pre-push.confirm = python:/path/to/confirm_target.py:hook


For TortoiseHg Users

If you use TortoiseHg and find errors such as this:

Checking Linden Lab proprietary coding policies...
autobuild.xml: this hook requires llsd from the llbase python package
  (to skip this check, commit a trivial change to this file,
  and add the text "'warn-on-failure:valid-llsd'" to your commit comment)

This is due to TortoiseHg using its own python system and not finding llbase. See http://tortoisehg.readthedocs.io/en/latest/faq.html To fix this, first ensure you actually have llbase installed:

pip install llbase -U

Then create a file 'setsyspath.py' with this simple python code that adds the path to installed llbase to the system path:

import sys
sys.path.append(r'C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages')

Save this somewhere on your system

Next, edit your global hg configuration file and add this as the first extension:

[extensions]
00setSysPath = C:\<path to where you saved the file>\setsyspath.py

This will add the path to the libraries installed on your normal python installation to hg's python code