Mercurial > hg-stable
view tests/autodiff.py @ 40479:197f092b2cd9 stable 4.8.2
server: always close http socket if responding with an error (issue6033)
It's possible for hgweb to respond _very_ early with an error if we're
catching certain types of errors. When we do, we need to tell the client
the socket is toast when there's a POST involved because otherwise there
can be lingering POST data on the socket that will confuse any future
requests on the socket. This manifested as a flaky failure on Linux in an
lfs extension test and a reliable failure on FreeBSD. With this patch
applied, test-lfs-serve-access.t now passes for me on FreeBSD.
Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D5498
author | Augie Fackler <raf@durin42.com> |
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date | Sun, 06 Jan 2019 14:58:54 -0500 |
parents | cdccfe20eed7 |
children | 2372284d9457 |
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# Extension dedicated to test patch.diff() upgrade modes from __future__ import absolute_import from mercurial import ( error, patch, pycompat, registrar, scmutil, ) cmdtable = {} command = registrar.command(cmdtable) @command(b'autodiff', [(b'', b'git', b'', b'git upgrade mode (yes/no/auto/warn/abort)')], b'[OPTION]... [FILE]...') def autodiff(ui, repo, *pats, **opts): opts = pycompat.byteskwargs(opts) diffopts = patch.difffeatureopts(ui, opts) git = opts.get(b'git', b'no') brokenfiles = set() losedatafn = None if git in (b'yes', b'no'): diffopts.git = git == b'yes' diffopts.upgrade = False elif git == b'auto': diffopts.git = False diffopts.upgrade = True elif git == b'warn': diffopts.git = False diffopts.upgrade = True def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs): brokenfiles.add(fn) return True elif git == b'abort': diffopts.git = False diffopts.upgrade = True def losedatafn(fn=None, **kwargs): raise error.Abort(b'losing data for %s' % fn) else: raise error.Abort(b'--git must be yes, no or auto') ctx1, ctx2 = scmutil.revpair(repo, []) m = scmutil.match(ctx2, pats, opts) it = patch.diff(repo, ctx1.node(), ctx2.node(), match=m, opts=diffopts, losedatafn=losedatafn) for chunk in it: ui.write(chunk) for fn in sorted(brokenfiles): ui.write((b'data lost for: %s\n' % fn))