tests/test-debugcommands.t
author Matt Harbison <matt_harbison@yahoo.com>
Wed, 19 Nov 2014 23:41:40 -0500
changeset 23388 42ed0780ec4b
parent 23256 1c11393d5dfb
child 23547 21446f4d5c62
permissions -rw-r--r--
run-tests: set a default largefiles usercache in the default hgrc file This fixes a test failure introduced in 4be754832829 on Windows and OS X, where the cached largefile wasn't being deleted because the named .cache directory didn't exist. It only existed on Linux because the test suite sets $HOME to the directory of the test being run, and Linux uses $HOME/.cache by default. Most of the other largefiles tests explicitly set this value at the top of their scripts, but test-largefiles-update.t didn't pick that up when it was created. Those scripts that do set a value will override this. We could just set the parameter in the test-largefiles-update.t script, but there are a few other non obvious tests that exercise largefiles too. These largefiles end up being cached in the user's real cache, so proper hygiene dictates that this not be left to each individual test script.

  $ hg init debugrevlog
  $ cd debugrevlog
  $ echo a > a
  $ hg ci -Am adda
  adding a
  $ hg debugrevlog -m
  format : 1
  flags  : inline
  
  revisions     :  1
      merges    :  0 ( 0.00%)
      normal    :  1 (100.00%)
  revisions     :  1
      full      :  1 (100.00%)
      deltas    :  0 ( 0.00%)
  revision size : 44
      full      : 44 (100.00%)
      deltas    :  0 ( 0.00%)
  
  avg chain length  : 0
  compression ratio : 0
  
  uncompressed data size (min/max/avg) : 43 / 43 / 43
  full revision size (min/max/avg)     : 44 / 44 / 44
  delta size (min/max/avg)             : 0 / 0 / 0

Test max chain len
  $ cat >> $HGRCPATH << EOF
  > [format]
  > maxchainlen=4
  > EOF

  $ printf "This test checks if maxchainlen config value is respected also it can serve as basic test for debugrevlog -d <file>.\n" >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ printf "b\n" >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ printf "c\n" >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ printf "d\n" >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ printf "e\n" >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ printf "f\n" >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ printf 'g\n' >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ printf 'h\n' >> a
  $ hg ci -m a
  $ hg debugrevlog -d a
  # rev p1rev p2rev start   end deltastart base   p1   p2 rawsize totalsize compression heads chainlen
      0    -1    -1     0   ???          0    0    0    0     ???      ????           ?     1        0 (glob)
      1     0    -1   ???   ???          0    0    0    0     ???      ????           ?     1        1 (glob)
      2     1    -1   ???   ???        ???  ???  ???    0     ???      ????           ?     1        2 (glob)
      3     2    -1   ???   ???        ???  ???  ???    0     ???      ????           ?     1        3 (glob)
      4     3    -1   ???   ???        ???  ???  ???    0     ???      ????           ?     1        4 (glob)
      5     4    -1   ???   ???        ???  ???  ???    0     ???      ????           ?     1        0 (glob)
      6     5    -1   ???   ???        ???  ???  ???    0     ???      ????           ?     1        1 (glob)
      7     6    -1   ???   ???        ???  ???  ???    0     ???      ????           ?     1        2 (glob)
      8     7    -1   ???   ???        ???  ???  ???    0     ???      ????           ?     1        3 (glob)
  $ cd ..

Test internal debugstacktrace command

  $ cat > debugstacktrace.py << EOF
  > from mercurial.util import debugstacktrace, dst, sys
  > def f():
  >     dst('hello world')
  > def g():
  >     f()
  >     debugstacktrace(skip=-5, f=sys.stdout)
  > g()
  > EOF
  $ python debugstacktrace.py
  hello world at:
   debugstacktrace.py:7 in * (glob)
   debugstacktrace.py:5 in g
   debugstacktrace.py:3 in f
  stacktrace at:
   debugstacktrace.py:7 *in * (glob)
   debugstacktrace.py:6 *in g (glob)
   */util.py:* in debugstacktrace (glob)