view scripts/shortlog.py @ 8751:ad239692ea95

mail: fix duplicate "From" headers Problem introduced in 9a0c41175e66: When iterating the headers dict and setting "msg[key] = value", it wasn't replacing the header but performing add_header so we sometimes ended up with two From headers. It is also a general problem that while the headers dict only can contain each key once, it can contain entries that only differ in casing and thus will fold to the same message header, making it possible to end up adding duplicate headers. "msg.replace_header(key, value)" is not a simple solution to the problem: it will raise KeyError if no such previous key exists. Now, make the problem more clear by explicitly using add_header. Avoid the duplication problem by deleting the key (no matter which casing) before invoking add_header. Delete promises that "No exception is raised if the named field isn’t present in the headers".
author Mads Kiilerich <mads@kiilerich.com>
date Wed, 04 Nov 2020 00:35:21 +0100
parents 96b43734025f
children
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#!/usr/bin/env python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-

"""
Kallithea script for generating a quick overview of contributors and their
commit counts in a given revision set.
"""
import argparse
import os
from collections import Counter

import contributor_data


def main():

    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Generate a list of committers and commit counts.')
    parser.add_argument('revset',
                        help='revision set specifying the commits to count')
    args = parser.parse_args()

    repo_entries = [
        (contributor_data.name_fixes.get(name) or contributor_data.name_fixes.get(name.rsplit('<', 1)[0].strip()) or name).rsplit('<', 1)[0].strip()
        for name in (line.strip()
         for line in os.popen("""hg log -r '%s' -T '{author}\n'""" % args.revset).readlines())
        ]

    counter = Counter(repo_entries)
    for name, count in counter.most_common():
        if name == '':
            continue
        print('%4s %s' % (count, name))


if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()