tests: use ls instead of find, all files are in the same directory
In this case find has no advantage compared to ls. Descending into directories
is unnecessary, because there are none.
$ hg init
Issue562: .hgignore requires newline at end:
$ touch foo
$ touch bar
$ touch baz
$ cat > makeignore.py <<EOF
> f = open(".hgignore", "w")
> f.write("ignore\n")
> f.write("foo\n")
> # No EOL here
> f.write("bar")
> f.close()
> EOF
$ python makeignore.py
Should display baz only:
$ hg status
? baz
$ rm foo bar baz .hgignore makeignore.py
$ touch a.o
$ touch a.c
$ touch syntax
$ mkdir dir
$ touch dir/a.o
$ touch dir/b.o
$ touch dir/c.o
$ hg add dir/a.o
$ hg commit -m 0
$ hg add dir/b.o
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
? syntax
$ echo "*.o" > .hgignore
$ hg status
abort: $TESTTMP/.hgignore: invalid pattern (relre): *.o (glob)
[255]
$ echo ".*\.o" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
Check it does not ignore the current directory '.':
$ echo "^\." > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
? syntax
$ echo "glob:**.o" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
$ echo "glob:*.o" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
$ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
$ echo "re:.*\.o" >> .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
$ echo "syntax: invalid" > .hgignore
$ hg status
$TESTTMP/.hgignore: ignoring invalid syntax 'invalid' (glob)
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
? syntax
$ echo "syntax: glob" > .hgignore
$ echo "*.o" >> .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? syntax
$ echo "relglob:syntax*" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? a.o
? dir/c.o
$ echo "relglob:*" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
$ cd dir
$ hg status .
A b.o
$ hg debugignore
(?:(?:|.*/)[^/]*(?:/|$))
$ cd ..
Check patterns that match only the directory
$ echo "^dir\$" > .hgignore
$ hg status
A dir/b.o
? .hgignore
? a.c
? a.o
? syntax