Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/test-run-tests.py @ 23686:164915e8ef7b
narrowmatcher: propagate the rel() method
The full path is propagated to the original match object since this is often
used directly for printing a file name to the user. This is cleaner than
requiring each caller to join the prefix with the file name prior to calling it,
and will lead to not having to pass the prefix around separately. It is also
consistent with the bad() and abs() methods in terms of the required input. The
uipath() method now inherits this path building property.
There is no visible change in path style for rel() because it ultimately calls
util.pathto(), which returns an os.sep based path. (The previous os.path.join()
was violating the documented usage of util.pathto(), that its third parameter be
'/' separated.) The doctest needed to be normalized to '/' separators to avoid
test differences on Windows, now that a full path is returned for a short
filename.
The test changes are to drop globs that are no longer necessary when printing an
absolute file in a subrepo, as returned from match.uipath(). Previously when
os.path.join() was used to add the prefix, the absolute path to a file in a
subrepo was printed with a mix of '/' and '\'. The absolute path for a file not
in a subrepo, as returned from match.uipath(), is still purely '/' based.
author | Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 27 Nov 2014 10:16:56 -0500 |
parents | 56610da39b48 |
children | 625dd917f04f |
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"""test line matching with some failing examples and some which warn run-test.t only checks positive matches and can not see warnings (both by design) """ import os, re # this is hack to make sure no escape characters are inserted into the output if 'TERM' in os.environ: del os.environ['TERM'] import doctest run_tests = __import__('run-tests') def lm(expected, output): r"""check if output matches expected does it generally work? >>> lm('H*e (glob)\n', 'Here\n') True fail on bad test data >>> try: lm('a\n','a') ... except AssertionError, ex: print ex missing newline >>> try: lm('single backslash\n', 'single \backslash\n') ... except AssertionError, ex: print ex single backslash or unknown char """ assert expected.endswith('\n') and output.endswith('\n'), 'missing newline' assert not re.search(r'[^ \w\\/\r\n()*?]', expected + output), \ 'single backslash or unknown char' match = run_tests.TTest.linematch(expected, output) if isinstance(match, str): return 'special: ' + match else: return bool(match) # do not return match object def wintests(): r"""test matching like running on windows enable windows matching on any os >>> _osaltsep = os.altsep >>> os.altsep = True valid match on windows >>> lm('g/a*/d (glob)\n', 'g\\abc/d\n') True direct matching, glob unnecessary >>> lm('g/b (glob)\n', 'g/b\n') 'special: -glob' missing glob >>> lm('/g/c/d/fg\n', '\\g\\c\\d/fg\n') 'special: +glob' restore os.altsep >>> os.altsep = _osaltsep """ pass def otherostests(): r"""test matching like running on non-windows os disable windows matching on any os >>> _osaltsep = os.altsep >>> os.altsep = False backslash does not match slash >>> lm('h/a* (glob)\n', 'h\\ab\n') False direct matching glob can not be recognized >>> lm('h/b (glob)\n', 'h/b\n') True missing glob can not not be recognized >>> lm('/h/c/df/g/\n', '\\h/c\\df/g\\\n') False restore os.altsep >>> os.altsep = _osaltsep """ pass if __name__ == '__main__': doctest.testmod()