Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Python adds a space character between consecutive calls to
print when the first print doesn't end in a newline. To
avoid problems with this, use <file>.write() rather than
print when:
* We might be printing something empty
* The newline after the line is added via echoed user
input on the terminal
Tracked down by William Jon McCann <william.jon.mccann@gmail.com>
|
|
|
|
Chromium and Google Chrome have the same basic way of storing
cookes, but different config paths. Add a google-chrome browser
option with the correct config path for Google Chrome.
Based on a patch by Eitan Isaacson <eitan@monotonous.org>
|
|
When they moved to webkit as the browser engine, epiphany changed the location
of their cookies database, but the format remained the same. This patch adds
support for the new location, but falls back to the old location if the new one
doesn't exist.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=609668
|
|
The code that was supposed to handle
'See Mozilla bug http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?...'
as a cross reference was also detecting
'See
https://developer.mozilla.org/en/SpiderMonkey/JSAPI_Reference/JS_MaybeGC
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=614725'
As a cross-reference. Fix by requiring the "intervening words" not
to have a : or / in them, since "See <url>" is clearly standalone
and something with a : or a / in it is probably an URL.
Reported by Adel Gadllah
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=619328
|
|
When we check for uncommitted changes prior to adding URLs to
to commit messages we should ignore submodules, since they don't
affect the rebase xprocess we use to add URLs.
Reported by Benjamin Otte
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=611693
|
|
Expiry times are in microseconds since the epoch (with the epoch
depending on the exact version of Chromium.)
We weren't handling this at all and just considering all cookies
non-expired because of the seconds vs. microseconds difference.
|
|
'git bz add-url' was dying because the code was expecting all subcommands
to have an --add-url option but add-url doesn't.
|
|
Adding an URL to just some commits was broken in the rewrite to
be more like git rebase, shuffle things around to fix that.
|
|
bugzilla.gnome.org now supports and redirects to https; even though we
handle the redirects, having it as https in the config will save
a round trip.
|
|
Handle redirect HTTP responses, in particular if a Bugzilla server
is redirecting from http to https.
We try to detect "Bugzilla URL base is over here" when we ask for
show_bug.cgi and remember that for future requests to the same BugServer
to avoid too many redirections.
Switch from caching connection on the BugServer to a global connection
cache, and rewrite the BugServer cache so to deal with the possibility
of redirections.
|
|
I'm not entirely up to speed with the new syntax of Python 2.6, but
apparently you can now do:
func(*args, named_arg=value, **options)
and:
func(*args, named_arg=value)
and Python will happily coalesce named_arg into **options for you.
This is not a valid syntax for Python 2.5, though.
|
|
Add one-stop-shopping --fix=<bug reference> options to 'git bz push'
and 'git bz edit'. These combine attaching the patches and resolving
the bug for cases where review and testing aren't necessary.
|
|
Instead of resetting the branch and applying the patches there,
move to a detached HEAD, apply patches to the detached HEAD and
then make a single update to the branch ref.
The only real advantage of this is that 'git reflog show <branchname>'
shows a single meaningful commit.
|
|
- Always do 'git bz attach --edit'
- Apply patches as a single mailbox
- Make -u/--add-url kinder on the reflog
|
|
Move the documentation from a giant comment at the start of the file
into a separate asciidoc document. Among other revisions an
'EXAMPLE SESSION' section is added to give a sense of the normal
workflow.
Add a Makefile and asciidoc.conf for converting the asciidoc into HTML
or a man page.
|
|
- Remove the -p shortcut for 'git bz edit --pushed' - I don't find
it sufficiently mnemonic to be worth confusion with things like
'git add -p'.
- Say -n/--no-add-url instead of just --no-add-url in an error message.
- Fix usage messages to consistently use () for grouping and [] for
optional parts.
|
|
When there is a single bug referenced in the commits being attached,
allow using that instead of specifying a bug reference manually.
|
|
1) It's confusing to have it different
2) For git bz push, we want to have that association whenever
possible, even if you didn't create the patch yourself.
|
|
If patches have a status and it's 'committed' or 'rejected', then
skip them for git-bz apply and don't prompt.
|
|
Allow configuring the behavior of add-url and --add-url with the
bz.add-url-method config variable. For example:
git config bz.add-url-method subject-prepend:Bug %d -
|
|
* Avoid false positives when the bug # is a substring of a number
in the commit.
* Look at the header, not just the body, for an existing bug #
* When there are local changes, don't print the diffs to the
the screen.
* For 'git bz add-url' indicate what commits we are skipping, and
don't prompt if we aren't going to do anything.
* Don't start the rebase procedure if we aren't going to do anything.
|
|
Switch the default for 'git bz file' and 'git bz attach' so that they
automatically add the URL to the commit message. Add -n/--no-add-url
options to disable adding the URL.
|
|
If we make attachment changes first, we change the timestamp of the
bug; rather than refetching a new token for the bug (or parsing it
out of the HTML response), we just make the bug changes first and
the attachment changes second.
|
|
Fix a problem with adding patches to the 'unapplied_patches' set.
|
|
Use our constant-field-value cache to cache legal field values
for each server; this cuts round trips for 'git bz edit' from
3 to 1, which is quite noticeably faster.
The legal_values method is moved from Bug to BugServer, where
it makes more sense.
|
|
We don't want to constantly refetch things like legal field values
from the server. Add a simple cache based on RawConfigParser and
pickled values stored in ~/.git-bz-cache.
|
|
When listing the available commands, include 'push'
|
|
token = bug.find("token")
self.token = token.text if token else None
Was behaving strangely: apparently ElementTree can be logically
false when non-None. Switch to the more explicit:
self.token = None if token is None else token.text
|
|
Field value for isobsolete must be string "1" not 1.
|
|
* Catch the server returning a 500 protocol error on xmlrpc.cgi;
this happens with bugzilla.openedhand.com and probably other
older versions of post 3.0 bugzilla.
* Handle the server not sending bug/attachment tokens
* Make patch-status handling conditional on the server having
status on patches.
|
|
'git bz edit --pushed <commits>' automatically prepares the bug
editing buffering based on a guess as what edits (comments, resolving
the bug, changing attachment status) are appropriate once the
commits are pushed to the project's official repository.
'git bz push' actually pushes commits and then does
'git bz edit --pushed'
|
|
If _return_error=True is added to git.<command_name>() then a
tuple of captured output from stderr, stdout is returned. We'll
need this to parse the output of 'git push' which goes to stderr.
|
|
If a commit or revision range is passed to 'git bz edit', make it
edit all the bugs referenced in the commit or commits.
|
|
Instead of using (host, https, id) tuples, encapsulate the information
in a BugHandle class.
Add get_bug_server() method to look up a server for a (host, https)
pair; we uniquify the server across multiple lookups; this will be
useful if we edit multiple bugs in a single run.
|
|
git bz edit <bug reference>
Allows doing common operations on a Bugzilla bug without going to
your web browser. An editable buffer is brought up in a git-like
fashion, where you can add comments, resolve a bug, and change
the status of patches.
This is really a warm-up for 'git bz push' which will do a
semi-automatic job of figuring out all the appropriate edits that
need to be made when pushing a set of commits that are annotated
with bug references.
|
|
Add Bug.legal_values() to query the server via XML-RPC to find
out legal values for a particular field.
|
|
Add Bug.update_patch() to allow changing fields of an existing
attachment (status, isobsolete, etc.)
This requires saving all the fields when parsing them out of the
bug XML, since we have to pass them back to attachment.cgi.
|
|
Add Bug.update() to allow changing fields in an existing bug.
(adding comments, setting the status/resolution, etc.)
|
|
abbreviation_help_string(['apple', 'pear', 'potato']) =>
'[a]pple, [pe]ar, [po]tato'
expand_abbreviation('pea', ['apple', 'pear', 'potato']) =>
'pear'
|
|
Encapsulate the process of grepping through successful (200)
responses from Bugzilla to see if they were *really* successful
in a function.
|
|
We only want to pass in a non-None files in one place, so allow
files=None to be the same as {}.
|
|
If the server supports XML-RPC (3.0 or newer), then filing via
xmlrpc.cgi has advantages:
- We get a string error message instead of an HTML page
- We can not specify priority/severity and let the server
default it; this is important since there aren't standard
priorities.
So, we try to first file via xmlrpc.cgi's Bug.create method and
if we get a 404, fall back to the old method of a form post.
The configuration for a couple of fields is changed to use the human
readable field names from Bug.create rather than the database-field
names of post_bug.cgi.
default-bug-severity => default-severity
default-rep-platform => default-platform
|
|
Create a separate BugServer class that represents a Bugzilla server
instance and has send_request()/send_post() methods.
|
|
A string with unsubstituted %s was being printed; substitute in
the host and browser properly.
Pointed out by Jonathon Jongsma
|
|
If the user specifies the bug url on the command line but the url violates our
assumptions, git-bz doesn't currently handle it well. For instance, the
following commandline invocation:
git bz attach http://bugzilla.foo.org HEAD
will fail the regex that checks whether it is a bugzilla url (since it is
missing show_bug.cgi), so it will interpret it as a 'alias:1234'-style
reference. 'http' is interpreted as the alias, but when that is not found in
the git config, it will attempt to look up a browser cookie for the host 'http'.
That will also fail, but it will report a misleading error which is something like:
Please log in to 'http' in Firefox
This patch just does a little sanity checking that the bug id is a number and
aborts with a slightly more helpful error message if that is not true.
|
|
The version of Colin's Chromium patch I applied was outdated and had an obvious
left-over in the Xulrunner codepaths that made things no longer with with Firefox
and Epiphany. Fix.
|
|
Chromium uses sqlite for cookies as well and with a very similar
(but not identical) schema compared to xulrunner. Abstract things
a bit so that chromium can use most of the same code.
|
|
All of the bugtrackers we care about (gnome,mozilla,freedesktop,openedhand),
include attachment data in the ctype=xml output, so:
- Use excludefield=attachmentdata when we don't want attachment data
- Use the data downloaded with the XML data when we do want attachment
data (git bz apply) rather than downloading it separately.
This fixes problems with bugzilla servers that use a redirect for attachments.
|
|
Bugzilla 3.4 (like the new GNOME bugzilla)
- Requires a status for attached patches
- Uses a different title for succesful attachments
|