tests/test-ui-config.py
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Tue, 24 Nov 2015 15:16:25 -0800
changeset 27142 060f83d219b9
parent 25660 328739ea70c3
child 28680 ae606bdedc3e
permissions -rw-r--r--
extensions: refuse to load extensions if minimum hg version not met As the author of several 3rd party extensions, I frequently see bug reports from users attempting to run my extension with an old version of Mercurial that I no longer support in my extension. Oftentimes, the extension will import just fine. But as soon as we run extsetup(), reposetup(), or get into the guts of a wrapped function, we encounter an exception and abort. Today, Mercurial will print a message about extensions that don't have a "testedwith" declaring explicit compatibility with the current version. The existing mechanism is a good start. But it isn't as robust as I would like. Specifically, Mercurial assumes compatibility by default. This means extension authors must perform compatibility checking in their extsetup() or we wait and see if we encounter an abort at runtime. And, compatibility checking can involve a lot of code and lots of error checking. It's a lot of effort for extension authors. Oftentimes, extension authors know which versions of Mercurial there extension works on and more importantly where it is broken. This patch introduces a magic "minimumhgversion" attribute in extensions. When found, the extension loading mechanism will compare the declared version against the current Mercurial version. If the extension explicitly states we require a newer Mercurial version, a warning is printed and the extension isn't loaded beyond importing the Python module. This causes a graceful failure while alerting the user of the compatibility issue. I would be receptive to the idea of making the failure more fatal. However, care would need to be taken to not criple every hg command. e.g. the user may use `hg config` to fix the hgrc and if we aborted trying to run that, the user would effectively be locked out of `hg`! A potential future improvement to this functionality would be to catch ImportError for the extension/module and parse the source code for "minimumhgversion = 'XXX'" and do similar checking. This way we could give more information about why the extension failed to load.

from mercurial import ui, dispatch, error

testui = ui.ui()
parsed = dispatch._parseconfig(testui, [
    'values.string=string value',
    'values.bool1=true',
    'values.bool2=false',
    'values.boolinvalid=foo',
    'values.int1=42',
    'values.int2=-42',
    'values.intinvalid=foo',
    'lists.list1=foo',
    'lists.list2=foo bar baz',
    'lists.list3=alice, bob',
    'lists.list4=foo bar baz alice, bob',
    'lists.list5=abc d"ef"g "hij def"',
    'lists.list6="hello world", "how are you?"',
    'lists.list7=Do"Not"Separate',
    'lists.list8="Do"Separate',
    'lists.list9="Do\\"NotSeparate"',
    'lists.list10=string "with extraneous" quotation mark"',
    'lists.list11=x, y',
    'lists.list12="x", "y"',
    'lists.list13=""" key = "x", "y" """',
    'lists.list14=,,,,     ',
    'lists.list15=" just with starting quotation',
    'lists.list16="longer quotation" with "no ending quotation',
    'lists.list17=this is \\" "not a quotation mark"',
    'lists.list18=\n \n\nding\ndong',
    ])

print repr(testui.configitems('values'))
print repr(testui.configitems('lists'))
print "---"
print repr(testui.config('values', 'string'))
print repr(testui.config('values', 'bool1'))
print repr(testui.config('values', 'bool2'))
print repr(testui.config('values', 'unknown'))
print "---"
try:
    print repr(testui.configbool('values', 'string'))
except error.ConfigError as inst:
    print inst
print repr(testui.configbool('values', 'bool1'))
print repr(testui.configbool('values', 'bool2'))
print repr(testui.configbool('values', 'bool2', True))
print repr(testui.configbool('values', 'unknown'))
print repr(testui.configbool('values', 'unknown', True))
print "---"
print repr(testui.configint('values', 'int1'))
print repr(testui.configint('values', 'int2'))
print "---"
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list1'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list2'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list3'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list4'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list4', ['foo']))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list5'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list6'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list7'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list8'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list9'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list10'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list11'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list12'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list13'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list14'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list15'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list16'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list17'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'list18'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown', ''))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown', 'foo'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown', ['foo']))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown', 'foo bar'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown', 'foo, bar'))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown', ['foo bar']))
print repr(testui.configlist('lists', 'unknown', ['foo', 'bar']))

print repr(testui.config('values', 'String'))

def function():
    pass

# values that aren't strings should work
testui.setconfig('hook', 'commit', function)
print function == testui.config('hook', 'commit')

# invalid values
try:
    testui.configbool('values', 'boolinvalid')
except error.ConfigError:
    print 'boolinvalid'
try:
    testui.configint('values', 'intinvalid')
except error.ConfigError:
    print 'intinvalid'