Re: HG problem: abort: decoding near '9: error: ‘sse2::l': 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position 213: ordinal not in range(128)
On 2018/12/03 1:18, Dave Townsend wrote: I would report this to mercurial. Thank you very much. Looking forward to hearing the answer (maybe this could be HGENCODING=utf-8 after all. ) I have a suspicion that python's locale handler, especially the one that is involved in iconv-like code conversion has become either stricter or buggier in the transition from v2 to v3. This is based on my observation of another program broken in subtle manner: I have used a very useful visual merge tool called "meld" for more than a year until this spring. That runs under linux and is written in python. This fall, when I tried to use it again to manage the merge of local changes to mozilla TB so that they can be applied to newer TB source tree I fetched from comm-central, I notice that "meld" fail to handle a few local files that contain non-ASCII character. They are local memo files. It is very annoying and again the problem was traced to encode/decode in python runtime. Thank you again. On Sat, Dec 1, 2018 at 11:53 PM ISHIKAWA,chiaki wrote: Hi, I am developing mozilla patches locally under my local PC running linux. I often include the GCC's error/warning message in the mercurial commit message (in the second and subsequent lines, the first line is for usage by mozilla's bugzilla procedure.) when my local patch is created to address build error or suppress compiler warning. It worked just fine for months/years. After an upgrade of local tools under Debian GNU/Linux last month or so, I just noticed that such a patch with GCC warning line could not be re-applied after it was qpopped. (I use mercurial mqueue extension.) This happened yesterday. This is the error message. note: commit message saved in .hg/last-message.txt transaction abort! rollback completed abort: decoding near '9: error: ‘sse2::l': 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position 213: ordinal not in range(128)! I was puzzled. After looking at the patch and the message above, I finally figured out that that hg barfed on the proper quote character just before "sse2::l" above. Can you spot the slightly tilted OPENING quote character? So I removed the GCC warning line from the commit message and the patch could be applied. This is problematic because I have about a few dozen patches (actually more) and some patches could not be re-applied due to the error above. I had to temporarily removed the offending patch(es). Luckily the offending patches are relatively independent and taken out for the moment. But this could not be done if the patches are interdependent and must be applied in a certain order. Either - GCC began producing such a non-ascii character lately (it is v7 on my linux PC) [but I think I must have seen such characters long time before that], - the "ascii" codec or whatever used by python has become very strict (But why ascii? Should we not use utf-8 after all?) [this could be an issue with setup of hg under my Debian GNU/Linux distribution?] , or - something in my locale/character setting under Debian GNU/Linux broke lately due to the upgrade of local packages. My point is that I have NOT changed in my personal setting at all (unless |./mach bootstrap| I occasionally run to make sure that I have the latest rust and other tools did something funny to my .hgrc). Only the tools and system-wide setting could have changed mysteriously from my point of view. I found a similar bug report in the following open source project: https://github.com/schacon/hg-git/issues/27 I have not tried the HGENCODING=utf-8 fix mentioned in the above URL for fear of breaking existing patches against my local copy of the mozilla-central and comm-central source tree. I wonder what would be the ultimate correct fix or procedure to avoid/suppress this error. I am posting this to warn developers who *MAY* see similar issues, and to figure out where I should contact and report the issue: - mercurial developers? - python developers? - who else? I understand that mozilla is a big user of mercurial and so it should have some clout to figure out the correct answer is quickly. :-) TIA Happy Hacking in the good old sense of the phrase... from a very perplexed linux user. ___ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform ___ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform ___ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform
Re: HG problem: abort: decoding near '9: error: ‘sse2::l': 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position 213: ordinal not in range(128)
I would report this to mercurial. On Sat, Dec 1, 2018 at 11:53 PM ISHIKAWA,chiaki wrote: > Hi, > > I am developing mozilla patches locally under my local PC running linux. > > I often include the GCC's error/warning message in the mercurial > commit message (in the second and subsequent lines, the first line is > for usage by mozilla's bugzilla procedure.) when my local patch is > created to address build error or suppress compiler warning. > > It worked just fine for months/years. > > After an upgrade of local tools under Debian GNU/Linux last month or > so, I just noticed that such a patch with GCC warning line could not > be re-applied after it was qpopped. (I use mercurial mqueue > extension.) > > This happened yesterday. This is the error message. > > note: commit message saved in .hg/last-message.txt > transaction abort! > rollback completed > abort: decoding near '9: error: ‘sse2::l': 'ascii' codec can't decode > byte 0xe2 in position 213: ordinal not in range(128)! > > I was puzzled. After looking at the patch and the message above, I > finally figured out that that hg barfed on the proper quote character > just before "sse2::l" above. Can you spot the slightly tilted OPENING > quote character? > > So I removed the GCC warning line from the commit message and the > patch could be applied. This is problematic because I have about a few > dozen patches (actually more) and some patches could not be re-applied > due to the error above. I had to temporarily removed the offending > patch(es). Luckily the offending patches are relatively independent > and taken out for the moment. > But this could not be done if the patches are interdependent and > must be applied in a certain order. > > Either > - GCC began producing such a non-ascii character lately (it is v7 on > my linux PC) >[but I think I must have seen such characters long time before that], > - the "ascii" codec or whatever used by python has become very strict >(But why ascii? Should we not use utf-8 after all?) >[this could be an issue with setup of hg under my Debian GNU/Linux > distribution?] , or > - something in my locale/character setting under Debian GNU/Linux >broke lately due to the upgrade of local packages. > > My point is that I have NOT changed in my personal setting at all > (unless |./mach bootstrap| I occasionally run to make sure that I have > the latest rust and other tools did something funny to my .hgrc). > Only the tools and system-wide setting could have changed mysteriously > from my point of view. > > I found a similar bug report in the following open source project: > https://github.com/schacon/hg-git/issues/27 > > I have not tried the HGENCODING=utf-8 fix mentioned in the above URL > for fear of breaking existing patches against my local copy of the > mozilla-central and comm-central source tree. > > I wonder what would be the ultimate correct fix or > procedure to avoid/suppress this error. > > I am posting this to warn developers who *MAY* see similar issues, > and to figure out where I should contact and report the issue: > - mercurial developers? > - python developers? > - who else? > > I understand that mozilla is a big user of mercurial and so it should have > some clout to figure out the correct answer is quickly. :-) > > TIA > > Happy Hacking in the good old sense of the phrase... > > from a very perplexed linux user. > > ___ > dev-platform mailing list > dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org > https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform > ___ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform
HG problem: abort: decoding near '9: error: ‘sse2::l': 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position 213: ordinal not in range(128)
Hi, I am developing mozilla patches locally under my local PC running linux. I often include the GCC's error/warning message in the mercurial commit message (in the second and subsequent lines, the first line is for usage by mozilla's bugzilla procedure.) when my local patch is created to address build error or suppress compiler warning. It worked just fine for months/years. After an upgrade of local tools under Debian GNU/Linux last month or so, I just noticed that such a patch with GCC warning line could not be re-applied after it was qpopped. (I use mercurial mqueue extension.) This happened yesterday. This is the error message. note: commit message saved in .hg/last-message.txt transaction abort! rollback completed abort: decoding near '9: error: ‘sse2::l': 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position 213: ordinal not in range(128)! I was puzzled. After looking at the patch and the message above, I finally figured out that that hg barfed on the proper quote character just before "sse2::l" above. Can you spot the slightly tilted OPENING quote character? So I removed the GCC warning line from the commit message and the patch could be applied. This is problematic because I have about a few dozen patches (actually more) and some patches could not be re-applied due to the error above. I had to temporarily removed the offending patch(es). Luckily the offending patches are relatively independent and taken out for the moment. But this could not be done if the patches are interdependent and must be applied in a certain order. Either - GCC began producing such a non-ascii character lately (it is v7 on my linux PC) [but I think I must have seen such characters long time before that], - the "ascii" codec or whatever used by python has become very strict (But why ascii? Should we not use utf-8 after all?) [this could be an issue with setup of hg under my Debian GNU/Linux distribution?] , or - something in my locale/character setting under Debian GNU/Linux broke lately due to the upgrade of local packages. My point is that I have NOT changed in my personal setting at all (unless |./mach bootstrap| I occasionally run to make sure that I have the latest rust and other tools did something funny to my .hgrc). Only the tools and system-wide setting could have changed mysteriously from my point of view. I found a similar bug report in the following open source project: https://github.com/schacon/hg-git/issues/27 I have not tried the HGENCODING=utf-8 fix mentioned in the above URL for fear of breaking existing patches against my local copy of the mozilla-central and comm-central source tree. I wonder what would be the ultimate correct fix or procedure to avoid/suppress this error. I am posting this to warn developers who *MAY* see similar issues, and to figure out where I should contact and report the issue: - mercurial developers? - python developers? - who else? I understand that mozilla is a big user of mercurial and so it should have some clout to figure out the correct answer is quickly. :-) TIA Happy Hacking in the good old sense of the phrase... from a very perplexed linux user. ___ dev-platform mailing list dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform