view tests/md5sum.py @ 5378:8a2915f57dfc

convert: add a mode where mercurial_sink skips empty revisions. The getchanges function of some converter_source classes can return some false positives. I.e. they sometimes claim that a file "foo" was changed in some revision, even though its contents are still the same. convert_svn is particularly bad, but I think this can also happen with convert_cvs and, at least in theory, with mercurial_source. For regular conversions this is not really a problem - as long as getfile returns the right contents, we'll get a converted revision with the right contents. But when we use --filemap, this could lead to superfluous revisions being converted. Instead of fixing every converter_source, I decided to change mercurial_sink to work around this problem. When --filemap is used, we're interested only in revisions that touch some specific files. If a revision doesn't change any of these files, then we're not interested in it (at least for revisions with a single parent; merges are special). For mercurial_sink, we abuse this property and rollback a commit if the manifest text hasn't changed. This avoids duplicating the logic from localrepo.filecommit to detect unchanged files.
author Alexis S. L. Carvalho <alexis@cecm.usp.br>
date Thu, 04 Oct 2007 23:21:37 -0300
parents 306055f5b65c
children
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#!/usr/bin/env python
#
# Based on python's Tools/scripts/md5sum.py
#
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms
# of the PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2, which is
# GPL-compatible.

import sys
import os
import md5

for filename in sys.argv[1:]:
    try:
        fp = open(filename, 'rb')
    except IOError, msg:
        sys.stderr.write('%s: Can\'t open: %s\n' % (filename, msg))
        sys.exit(1)

    m = md5.new()
    try:
        while 1:
            data = fp.read(8192)
            if not data:
                break
            m.update(data)
    except IOError, msg:
        sys.stderr.write('%s: I/O error: %s\n' % (filename, msg))
        sys.exit(1)
    sys.stdout.write('%s  %s\n' % (m.hexdigest(), filename))

sys.exit(0)