I forgot to bump the version to 0.3.2 before tagging and releasing it,
so the released 0.3.2 has version number 0.3.1 in the source code and
(therefore) reported from `jj --version`. I'm therefore bumping it
from 0.3.1 to 0.3.3 now, so there can be a matching 0.3.3 release.
I was able to build a working musl binary with this change, by running
this command:
```
cargo build --release --target x86_64-unknown-linux-musl
```
Thanks to @arxanas for the tip.
There's been *a lot* of changes since 0.2.0 almost a year ago. With
the attention the project has gotten recently, I feel like I should
cut a new release and start keeping a changelog. So let's start by
bumping the version to 0.3.0.
The library crate shouldn't look up the user's `$HOME` directory
(maybe the library is used by a server process), so let's have the
caller pass it into the library crate instead.
I'm not sure it'll be useful, but it seems nice to be able to set the
same values via config or environment variables. Perhap we should
simply use `config::Environment` to make everything configurable via
environment variables, but I'll leave that for later.
It's useful to have `signature()` live on `UserSettings` because that
will let us cache information (such as the timestamp) in the
instance. It will also make it easier to have the timestamp settable
via regular config files. I don't know that that will be useful, but
it seems like a clean way of implementing it if we can have
environment variables simply as an overlay of configs.
We don't really need a BTreeMap for keeping the unchanged ranges. The
only place it helps a bit is when refining a diff because we may then
insert some more unchanged ranges in the list. I think there has to be
very many unchanged ranges for that to matter, however. This patch
therefore replace the BTreeMap by a sorted Vec. `cargo bench` says
that a few tests got ~20% faster.
I'm looking into this code now because I'm thinking of copying some of
it for the "partial conflict resolution" tool I'm working on for
Mercurial.
I wanted to replace the BTreeMap by a Vec and noticed that we actually
sometimes end up having a `0..n` range followed by a `0..0` after
refinement. We currently compare those two as equal because I had not
thought that we could end up attempting to add two ranges with the
same start point. When trying to insert the second range (`0..0`), the
BTreeMap will keep the existing key (`0..n`) and replace the
value. That's probably works, but it's clearly not what I
intended. Let's fix by sorting by the end point if the start point is
equal. This actually improves some benchmarks by a few percent (maybe
because the subsequent compaction can then remove the `0..0` range).
When the backing Git repo is inside the workspace (typically directly
in `.git/`), let's point to it by a relative path so the whole
workspace can be moved without breaking the link.
Closes#72.
This patch introduces a `JJ_TIMESTAMP` environment variable that lets
us specify the timestamp to use in tests. It also updates the tests to
use it, which means we get to simplify the tests a lot now that that
the hashes are predictable.
Originally, I had thought that these warnings would only potentially show up in nightly because there was a feature which exposed these functions, and we would be able to enable that feature and conditionally not define the conflicting methods. But it looks like these warnings also show up in stable. I've just suppressed each of them individually. Other options would be to rename them and just make them wrapper methods, or to disable `unstable_name_collisions` warnings at a higher scope (possibly including at the crate level).
1b6efdc3f8 moved `.jj/git/` into `.jj/store/` for consistency with
the layout of native stores. It provided automatic format upgrades for
repos with the old format. It's been about four months now, so let's
remove the migration code.
We no longer need the commit ID, so we shouldn't make the callers pass
it. This lets us simplify several tests, because they no longer to
create commits just to check out a tree in the working copy.
We used to use the value to detect races, but we use the tree ID and
the operation ID these days, so we don't need the commit ID.
By changing this, we can avoid creating some commit IDs in tests,
which is why I tackled this issue now.
There are only two callers of `LockedWorkingCopy::check_out()`. One is
in `commands.rs`. That caller already checks after taking the lock
that the old commit ID is as expected. The other caller is
`WorkingCopy::check_out()`. We can simply move the check to that level
since it's the only caller that cares now.
We resolve checkouts in favor of the first-committed operation (which
is more likely to have managed to update the working copy). The test
case has been flaky on GitHub lately. I've run it 1000 times on my
machine without failure. I don't know if GitHub's machines are just
faster in some way (SSD, maybe) that makes them finish the two
operations in the test in the same millisecond. Let's add a
1-millisecond sleep to see if that helps. If it doesn't, then maybe
the issue is that the clock has lower precision (or their clocks can
go backwards?).
`LockedWorkingCopy::discard()` shouldn't result in changes to the
on-disk state, but `LockedWorkingCopy::check_out()` may have already
written a state file, which is surprising. The changes also remain in
memory, which is also surprising. Let's fix both of those issues.
One of the .gitignore tests writes a tree from the working copy
twice. However, it discards the `LockedWorkingCopy` instance after the
first write, so the second write shouldn't really see the changes from
the first write. It does see them because we don't clear them in
memory (and we also surprisingly write them to disk). I'm about to fix
that, so the test needs to be fixed first.
It's useful to be able to match path prefixes for many commands,
e.g. to allow `jj restore src` to restore all files in under `src/`
(or a file called `src`). I also plan to use it for sparse checkouts.
We'll need to be able to match path prefixes
This is just to avoid the lifetime parameter. It was a premature
optimization to return a reference (we don't even use the matchers
yet, so it cloning these sets clearly doesn't show up in profiling).